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THE DAYS OF 
VENGEANCE 



But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, 
then know that her desolation is at hand. Then let those 
who are in Judea flee to the mountains, and [et those who 
are in the midst of the city depart, and let not those who are 
in the country enter the city; because these are the Days of 
Vengeance, in order that all things which are written may 
be fulfilled. 

Luke 21:20-22 



THE DAYS OF 
VENGEANCE 

An Exposition of the 
Book of Revelation 



David Chilton 



Dominion Press 
Ft. Worth, Texas 



Copyright © 1987 by Dominion Press 

First Printing, January, 1987 
Second Printing, December, 1987 
Third Printing, March, 1990 

All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured 
from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this 
book, except for brief quotations in critical reviews or 
articles. 

Published by Dominion Press 

P.O. Box 8204, Ft. Worth, Texas 76124 

Typesetting by Thoburn Press, Box 2459, Reston, VA 22090 
Printed in the United States of America 

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 86-050798 
ISBN 0-930462-09-2 



To my father and mother 



TABLE OF CONTENTS 



FOREWORD by Gordon J. Wenham ix 

AUTHOR'S PREFACE xi 

PUBLISHER'S PREFACE by Gary North xv 

INTRODUCTION 1 

Part One: PREAMBLE: THE SON OF MAN 

(Revelational) , . , 49 



1. King of Kings |. . 51 



Part Two: HISTORICAL PROLOGUE:THE LETTERS 

TO THE SEVEN CHURCHES(Revelation2-3) 85 

2. The Spirit Speaks to the Church: Overcome! 93 

3. The Dominion Mandate 119 

Part Three: ETHICAL STIPULATIONS: THE 

SEVEN SEALS(Revelation 4-7) 141 

4. The Throne Above the Sea 145 

5. Christus Victor 165 

6. In the Path of the White Horse 181 

7. The True Israel 201 

Part Four: COVENANT SANCTIONS: THE 
SEVEN TRUMPETS (Revelation 8-14) 

8. Liturgy and History 229 

9. All Hell Breaks Loose 243 

10. The Faithful Witness 259 

11. The End of the Beginning 271 

12. The HolyWar 295 

13. Leviathan and Behemoth 325 

14. The Kingdon Mount Zion 353 

Part Five: COVENANT SUCCESSION AND CONTFNUITY 
THE SEVEN CHALICES(Revelation 15-22) 379 

15. Seven Last Plagues 383 

16. Judgment from the Sanctuary 395 

vii 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

17. The False Bride 421 

18. Babylon Is Fallen! 445 

19. TheFeasts of the Kingdom 467 

20. The Millennium and the Judgment 493 

21. The New Jerusalem 535 

22. Come, Lord Jesus! 565 

CONCLUSION: THE LESSONS OF REVELATION 581 

APPENDIX A-The Levitical Symbolism in Revelation 

by Philip Barrington 593 

APPENDIX B - Christian Zionism and Messianic Judaism 

by James B. Jordan 612 

APPENDTX C- Common Grace, Eschatology, and Biblical 

Law by GaryNorth 622 

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 667 

SCRIPTURE PNDEX 679 

AUTHOR INDEX 701 

SUBJECT PNDEX 705 



VIII 



FOREWORD 

Readers of the Book of Revelation are either mesmerized or 
mystified by it. The mesmerized come up with such startling in- 
terpretations that the mystified often conclude that sober- 
minded Christians should leave the book well alone. 

David Chilton's commentary ought to be studied by both 
types of reader. He shows that Revelation is a book, like every 
other book of the New Testament, addressed primarily to the 
first-century church and easily understood by them, because 
they were thoroughly familiar with Old Testament imagery. He 
shows that once we grasp these idioms, Revelation is not diffi- 
cult for us to understand either. 

Revelation remains, though, a challenging and relevant 
book for us, not because it gives an outline of world history with 
special reference to our era, but because it shows us that Christ 
is in control of world history, and how we should live and pray 
and worship. In vivid powerful imagery it teaches us what it 
means to believe in God's sovereignty and justice. May this valu- 
able commentary prompt us to pray with John and the universal 
church in heaven and on earth, 'Even so come, Lord Jesus !' 

Gordon Wenham 
The College of St. 
Paul and St. Mary 
Cheltenham, England 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE 

From the very beginning, cranks and crackpots have attempted 
to use Revelation to advocate some new twist on the Chicken 
Little Doctrine: The Sky Is Falling! But, as I hope to show in 
this exposition, St. John's Apocalypse teaches instead that 
Christians will overcome all opposition through the work of 
Jesus Christ. My study has convinced me that a true under- 
standing of this prophecy must be based on the proper applica- 
tion of five crucial interpretive keys: 

1 . Revelation is the most "Biblical" book in the Bible. St. 
John quotes hundreds of passages from the Old Testament, 
often with subtle allusions to little-known religious rituals of the 
Hebrew people. In order to understand Revelation, we need to 
know our Bibles backward and forward. One reason why this 
commentary is so large is that I have tried to explain this exten- 
sive Biblical background, commenting on numerous portions of 
Scripture that shed light on St. John's prophecy. I have also re- 
printed, as Appendix A, Philip Barrington's excellent survey of 
the Levitical symbolism in Revelation. 

2. Revelation has a system of symbolism. Almost everyone 
recognizes that St. John wrote his message in symbols. But the 
meaning of those symbols is not up for grabs. There is a system- 
atic structure in Biblical symbolism. In order to understand 
Revelation properly, we must become familiar with the "lan- 
guage" in which it is written. Among other goals, this commen- 
tary seeks to bring the Church at least a few steps closer to a tru- 
ly Biblical Theology of Revelation. 

3. Revelation is a prophecy about imminent events - events 
that were about to break loose on the world of the first century. 
Revelation is not about nuclear warfare, space travel, or the end 

xi 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

of the world. Again and again it specifically warns that "the time 
is near!" St. John wrote his book as a prophecy of the approach- 
ing destruction of Jerusalem in a.d. 70, showing that Jesus 
Christ had brought the New Covenant and the New Creation. 
Revelation cannot be understood unless this fundamental fact is 
taken seriously. 

4. Revelation is a worship service. St. John did not write a 
textbook on prophecy. Instead, he recorded a heavenly worship 
service in progress. One of his major concerns, in fact, is that 
the worship of God is central to everything in life. It is the most 
important thing we do. For this reason I have devoted special 
attention throughout this commentary to the very considerable 
liturgical aspects of Revelation, and their implications for our 
worship services today. 

5. Revelation is a book about dominion. Revelation is not a 
book about how terrible the Antichrist is, or how powerful the 
devil is. It is, as the very first verse says, The Revelation of Jesus 
Christ. It tells us about His lordship over all; it tells us about our 
salvation and victory in the New Covenant, God's "wonderful 
plan for our life"; it tells us that the kingdom of the world has 
become the Kingdom of our God, and of His Christ; and it tells 
us that He and His people shall reign forever and ever. 

I have many people to thank for making this book possible. 
First and foremost, I am grateful to Dr. Gary North, without 
whose patience and considerable financial investment it simply 
could not have been written. The week I moved to Tyler, Gary 
took me along on one of his periodic book-buying sprees at a 
large used bookstore in Dallas. As I helped him haul hundreds 
of carefully chosen volumes to the checkstand (I bought a few 
books, too - a couple every hour or so, just to keep my hand in 
the game), Gary asked me what long-term project I'd like to 
work on, along with my other duties at the Institute for Christian 
Economics. "How about a medium-sized, popular-style, intro- 
ductory-level, easy-to-read book on Revelation?" I suggested. "I 
think I could knock something like that out in about three 
months." That was, almost to the day, 3 years and six months 
ago - or, as Gary might be tempted to mutter under his breath: 
A time, times, and half a time. At last, the tribulation has ended. 

The book, of course, has vastly outgrown its projected size 
and scope. No small part of that is due to the Rev. James B. 

xii 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

by Gary North 

With his first book on eschatology, Paradise Restored, x 
David Chilton launched an eschatological revival. "Revolution" 
would be too strong a word, for his viewpoint is an old one, 
stretching back to the early church. But overnight, Paradise Re- 
stored began to influence religious leaders and scholars who had 
believed that the Biblical case for cultural victory was dead - a 
relic of the nineteenth century. Now comes The Days of Ven- 
geance, a verse-by-verse exposition of the toughest book in the 
Bible, the Book of Revelation. What was generalized in Para- 
dise Restored is now supported with chapter and verse - indeed, 
lots and lots of chapters and verses. This book will become the 
new reference work on the Book of Revelation. Incredibly, 
Chilton's style is so lively that few readers will even notice that 
the author has tossed a scholarly bombshell. The conservative 
Christian academic world will be speechless; Chilton has offered 
a remarkable exegetical challenge to those who hold to the tradi- 
tional rival eschatologies, which I label pessimillennialism. 

This is not just another boring commentary on the Book of 
Revelation. Even if it were only that, it would be a major event, 
for the publication of any conservative, Bible-believing com- 
mentary on the Book of Revelation is a major event. W. Hen- 
drikson's amillennial commentary, More Than Conquerors, was 
published in 1940, and is less than half the size of this one, and 
not in the same league in terms of Biblical scholarship. John 
Walvoord's The Revelation of Jesus Christ is now over two dec- 



1. David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion (Ft. 
Worth: Dominion Press, 1985). 

xv 



THE DAYS OF vengeance 

ades old, and it, too, is only half the size of Chilton's. Despite 
all the fascination with Biblical prophecy in the twentieth cen- 
tury, full-length commentaries on this most prophetic of Biblical 
books are rare. 

They always have been rare. Few commentators have dared 
to explain the book. John Calvin taught through all the books 
of the Bible, save one: Revelation. Martin Luther wrote some- 
thing in the range of a hundred volumes of material - as much 
or more than Calvin - but he didn't write a commentary on Rev- 
elation. Moses Stuart wrote a great one in the mid-nineteenth 
century, but it is forgotten today. The Book of Revelation has 
resisted almost all previous attempts to unlock its secret of 
secrets. Now David Chilton has discovered this secret, this long- 
lost key that unlocks the code. 

This long-ignored key is the Old Testament. 

The Old Testament Background 
"Very funny," you may be saying to yourself. All right, I will 
admit it: it is funny - funny peculiar, not funny ha, ha. What 
Chilton does is to go back again and again to the Old Testament 
in order to make sense of the Apostle John's frame of reference. 
This technique works. It is the only technique that does work! 
Those who have never worked personally with Chilton can- 
not readily appreciate his detailed knowledge of the Bible, espe- 
cially the Old Testament. I used him dozens of times as my per- 
sonal concordance. He worked in the office next to mine. I 
would yell to him: "Hey, David, do you know where I can find 
the passage about . . . ?" I would relate a smattering of a Bible 
story, or some disjointed verse that was rattling around in my 
memory, and he would almost instantly tell me the chapter. He 
might or might not get the exact verse; usually, he was within 
three or four verses. That was always close enough. Rare was 
the occasion when he could not think of it; even then he would 
putter around in his extensive personal library until he found it. 
It never took him long. 

In this book, he has taken his remarkable memory of the 
Old Testament, and he has fused it with an interpretive tech- 
nique developed by James Jordan in his book, Judges: God's 
War Against Humanism (1985). 2 Jordan works with dozens of 



2. Tyler, Texas: Geneva Ministries, 1985. 

xvi 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE 

Jordan and the Rev. Ray Sutton, pastors of Westminster Pres- 
byterian Church in Tyler, Texas, who have greatly influenced my 
understanding of the Bible's literary and symbolic connections 
and liturgical structures. The Rev. Ned Rutland, of Westminster 
Presbyterian Church in Opelousas, Louisiana, read an early ver- 
sion of some chapters and, with consummate tact and gracious- 
ness, steered me in a more Biblical direction. James M. Peters, 
Tyler's resident historian of antiquities and computer whiz, was 
a rich treasury of information on the ancient world. 

There are others who contributed in various ways to the pro- 
duction of this volume. ICE's patient and cheerful secretaries, 
Mrs. Maureen Peters and Mrs. Lynn Dwelle, assisted me with 
many technical details and secured out-of-print books; they 
have developed the virtue of "going the extra mile" into a high 
art. Typesetter David Thoburn, a true artist, labored long hours 
in works of supererogation, solving unusual problems and en- 
suring the high quality and readability of the book. He has 
abundantly confirmed my conviction of his superior craftsman- 
ship. His assistant, Mrs. Sharon Nelson, was a valuable medi- 
ator, making sure our computers remained on speaking terms. 
The indexes were prepared by Mitch Wright and Vern Crisler. 

One of the most outstanding Bible scholars of our day is the 
British theologian Gordon J. Wenham, of the College of St. Paul 
and St. Mary, whose knowledgeable and well-written commentar- 
ies have made a significant mark throughout the evangelical 
world. My first contact with Dr. Wenham was last year, when, 
with no advance warning, I sent him a copy of my book Para- 
ge Restored. To my great surprise and delight, he wrote back 
to express his appreciation. This encouraged me (though not 
without a degree of fear and trembling) to solicit his comments 
on the uncorrected proofs of the present work. Dr. Wenham 
graciously took valuable time to read it, to offer suggestions, 
and to write the Foreword. I am grateful for his kindness. 
Naturally, he cannot be held responsible for the numerous 
shortcomings of this book. 

The latter point should perhaps be emphasized. This com- 
mentary makes no claim whatsoever to be the "last word" on the 
subject; indeed, if my eschatology is correct, the Church has 
many more years left to write many more words ! I am greatly 
indebted to the important contributions of many other com- 

Xlll 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

mentators-especiall yPhilip Barrington, Austin Farrer, J. Mas- 
syngberde Ford, Meredith G. Kline, J. Stuart Russell, Moses 
Stuart, Henry Barclay Swete, and Milton S. Terry- and I hope I 
have done justice to them in building on their foundation. Yet I 
am painfully aware that the task of commenting on St. John's 
magnificent prophecy far exceeds my abilities. Where I have 
failed adequately to set forth the message of the Revelation, I 
beg the indulgence of my brothers and sisters in Christ, and 
earnestly desire their comments and corrections. Letters may be 
addressed to me at P. O. Box 2314, Placerville, CA 95667. 

My beloved wife, Darlene, has always been my greatest 
source of encouragement. Our children (Nathan David, Jacob 
Israel, and Abigail Aviva) endured our collective "exile to Pat- 
mos" with true Johannine grace (mixed, perhaps, with occa- 
sional rumblings of Boanergean thunder as well!); and if their 
bedtime stories were somehow filled with more than the usual 
quota of cherubs, dragons, flying horses, and flaming swords, 
they never complained. 

Finally, I am grateful to my parents, the Rev. and Mrs. 
Harold B. Chilton. I was immeasurably blessed to grow up in a 
home where the Word of God is so highly honored, so faithfully 
taught, so truly lived. The environment they structured was con- 
stantly flooded with musical grandeur and richness, as the 
atmosphere was charged with rousing theological discussion, all 
in the context of caring for the needy, sheltering the homeless, 
feeding the hungry, and bringing to all the precious message of 
the Gospel. From the steaming jungles and rice paddies of the 
Philippines to the shaded lawns of Southern California, they set 
before me a remarkable and unforgettable example of what it 
means to be bondservants of the Lord. Some of my earliest 
memories are of seeing my parents' faith tested beyond what 
seemed the limits of human endurance; and when God had tried 
them, they came forth as gold. Holding forth the Testimony of 
Jesus, suffering the loss of all things in order to win Christ, they 
are what St. John has exhorted us all to be: faithful witnesses. 

This book is dedicated to them. 

David Chilton 
Tyler, Texas 
May 8, 1986 
Ascension Day 

xiv 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

Old Testament symbols that he has sifted from the historical 
narratives and the descriptions of the Tabernacle and Temple. 
Then he applies these symbols and models to other parallel Bible 
stories, including the New Testament's account of the life of 
Christ and the early church. No one does this better than Jor- 
dan, but Chilton has successfully applied this Biblical hermen- 
eutic (principle of interpretation) to the Book of Revelation in 
many creative ways. Chilton is not the first expositor to do this, 
as his footnotes and appendixes reveal, but he is unquestionably 
the best at it that the Christian church has yet produced with 
respect to the Book of Revelation. These Old Testament back- 
ground stories and symbols make sense of the difficult passages 
in Revelation. He makes clear the many connections between 
Old and New Testament symbolic language and historical 
references. This is why his commentary is so easy to read, 
despite the magnitude of what he has accomplished academically. 

The Missing Piece: The Covenant Structure 

There was a missing piece in the puzzle, however, and this 
kept the book in Chilton's computer for an extra year, at least. 
That missing piece was identified in the fall of 1985 by Pastor 
Ray Sutton. Sutton had been seriously burned in a kitchen acci- 
dent, and his mobility had been drastically reduced. He was 
working on a manuscript on the symbolism of the sacraments, 
when a crucial connection occurred to him. The connection was 
supplied by Westminster Seminary Professor Meredith G. Kline. 
Years earlier, he had read Professor Kline's studies on the an- 
cient suzerainty (kingly) treaties of the ancient Near East, 3 
Pagan kings would establish covenants with their vassals. Kline 
had pointed out that these treaties paralleled the structure of the 
Book of Deuteronomy. They had five points: (1) an identifica- 
tion of the king; (2) the historical events that led to the establish- 
ment of the covenant; (3) stipulations (terms) of the covenant; 
(4) a warning of judgment against anyone who disobeyed, but a 
promise of blessing to those who did obey; and (5) a system of 
reconfirming the treaty at the death of the king or the vassal. 



3. Kline, Treaty of the Great King (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1963); 
reprinted in part in his later book, The Structure of Biblical A uthority (Grand 
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1972). 

xvii 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

Kline developed some of the implications of this covenant 
scheme. Sutton developed a great many more. These remarka- 
ble, path-breaking discoveries can be found in his book, That 
You May Prosper (1987). ' But more importantly, he noticed that 
this five-point covenantal structure governs the books of 
Psalms, Hosea, Matthew, Hebrews 8, and several of Paul's 
epistles. Sutton's thoroughgoing development of the covenant 
structure has to be regarded as the most important single theo- 
logical breakthrough in the Christian Reconstruction movement 
since the publication of R. J. Rushdoony's Institutes of Biblical 
Law, in 1973. After Sutton pointed out this five-point cove- 
nantal structure, I recognized it in the Ten Commandments, just 
before I had finished my economic commentary on the Ten 
Commandments . 5 

Sutton presented his discovery in a series of Wednesday 
night Bible studies. The first night that Chilton heard it, he was 
stunned. He came up to Sutton after the message and told him 
that this was clearly the key to Revelation's structure. He had 
been trying to work with a four-point model, and he had be- 
come thoroughly stuck. Chilton went back to work, and within 
a few weeks he had restructured the manuscript. Within a few 
months, he had finished it, after three and a half years. (Time, 
times, and half a time.) 

Tyler Theology 

I am confident that The Days of Vengeance will come in for 
its share of ridicule — from many camps, for many reasons. 
Chilton's rhetorical brilliance will make this approach risky for 
critics who go into print, but the unpublished murmurings and 
backbiting will spread rapidly. Chilton is going to take a lot of 
heat because of his excursions into biblical symbolism and his 
argument that the structure of the Book of Revelation is the 
same as the structure of Deuteronomy. What the reader should 
understand from the beginning is that these two insights, while 
executed with great skill, are derived from the works of Kline, 
Jordan, and Sutton. Chilton should not be singled out as some 



4. Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion By Covenant (Tyler, 
Texas: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

5. Gary North, The Sinai Strategy: Economics and the Ten Command- 
ments (Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics, 1986). 

xvi'ri 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

sort of isolated theological maverick who simply invented his 
findings out of thin air - or worse, in a room filled with odd- 
smelling smoke. He came to these insights while he was working 
with other men in what has become known as "the Tyler group," 
located in Tyler, Texas, a town of about 75,000 in East Texas. 

This book is a good example, for better or worse, of what 
has become known as "Tyler theology." This theology is part of 
a larger stream of thought called Christian Reconstruction, also 
called "theonomy," although some members of these schools of 
thought prefer to avoid these terms. The broadest term is "do- 
minion theology." 

There are many people who espouse dominion theology who 
are not theonomists, and there are theonomists who are not 
"Tylerites." In fact, they are very loudly not Tylerites. They will 
go out of their wa*y to buttonhole people to tell them the extent 
to which they are not Tylerites. They have come close to defining 
themselves and their ministries as "not being Tylerite." (There is 
a scene in the old "Dracula" movie when the professor flashes a 
crucifix at Bela Lugosi, who immediately turns aside and pulls 
his cape over his face. I think of this scene whenever I think of 
these men telling others about Tyler. Some day I would like to 
flash a "Welcome to Tyler" sign in front of them, just to see what 
happens.) I know several of them who might someday be willing 
to start churches with names like "The First Not Tylerite Church 
of. ..." I know another who thinks of his group as "The First 
11 a.m. Sunday Morning Not Tylerite Bible Study. . .." They 
will therefore not appreciate Chilton's book. They will blame 
Chilton for adopting ideas that have been distributed from East 
Texas. Even though they might otherwise have agreed with his 
arguments, they are infected with a serious case of NDH - "Not 
Discovered Here" - a common malady among intellectuals. 

In short, they may attack The Days of Vengeance when they 
are really after Jordan and Sutton. Readers should be aware of 
this possibility well in advance. There is more to this book than 
meets the eye. 

Two things make the Tyler theology unique in the Christian 
Reconstruction camp: (1) its heavy accent on the church, with 
weekly Communion; and (2) its heavy use of the five-point cove- 
nant model. Covenant theology, especially the church covenant, 
has not been a major focus in the writings of some of the non- 

xix 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

Tyler leaders of the Christian Reconstruction movement. Theo- 
logically speaking the original "four points of Christian Recon- 
structionism" that Chilton and I have summarized — prov- 
idence (sovereignty of God), Biblical presuppositionalism (Van 
Til's apologetics: the Bible is the starting point and final court of 
appeal), eschatological optimism (postmillennialism), and Bibli- 
cal law (theonomy) — were insufficient. The fifth point, cove- 
nantalism, and specifically Sutton's five -point model, was added 
in late 1985 to complete the theological outline. 

The Days of Vengeance is especially concerned with the Reve- 
lation's covenant structure and the historical focus of its judg- 
ment passages. If, as Chilton argues so brilliantly, these passages 
of imminent doom and gloom relate to the fall of Jerusalem in 70 
a. d ., then there is no legitimate way to build a case for a Great 
Tribulation ahead of us. It is long behind us. Thus, the Book of 
Revelation cannot legitimately be used to buttress the case for 
eschatological pessimism. A lot of readers will reject his thesis at 
this point. The ones who are serious about the Bible will finish 
reading it before they reject his thesis. 

Pessimism 

The vast majority of Christians have believed that things will 
get progressively worse in almost every area of life until Jesus 
returns with His angels. Premillennialist believe that He will es- 
tablish an earthly visible kingdom, with Christ in charge and 
bodily present. Amillennialists do not believe in any earthly visi- 
ble kingdom prior to the final judgment. They believe that only 
the church and Christian schools and families will visibly repre- 
sent the kingdom on earth, and the world will fall increasingly 
under the domination of Satan. 7 Both eschatologies teach the 
earthly defeat of Christ% church prior to His physical return in 
power. 

One problem with such an outlook is that when the predict- 
able defeats in life come, Christians have a theological incentive 
to shrug their shoulders, and say to themselves, "That's life. 
That's the way God prophesied it would be. Things are getting 



6. Gary North and David Chilton, "Apologetics and Strategy," Christianity 
and Civilization, 3 (1983), pp. 107-16. 

7. Gary North, Dominion and Common Grace (Tyler, Texas: I nstitute for 
Christian Economics, 1987), especially chapter 5. 



XX 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

worse." They read the dreary headlines of the daily newspaper, 
and they think to themselves, "Jesus' Second Coming is just 
around the corner." The inner strength that people need to re- 
bound from life's normal external defeats is sapped by a theol- 
ogy that preaches inevitable earthly defeat for the church of 
Jesus Christ. People think to themselves: "If even God's holy 
church cannot triumph, then how can / expect to triumph?" 
Christians therefore become the psychological captives of news- 
paper-selling pessimistic headlines. 

They begin with a false assumption: the inevitable defeat in 
history of Christ's church by Satan's earthly forces, despite the 
fact that Satan was mortally wounded at Calvary. Satan is not 
"alive and well on Planet Earth." He is alive, but he is not well. 
To argue otherwise is to argue for the historical impotence and 
cultural irrelevance of Christ's work on Calvary. 

The Revival of Optimism 

While pessimistic eschatologies have been popular for a cen- 
tury, there has always been an alternative theology, a theology 
of dominion. It was the reigning faith of the Puritans in that 
first generation (1630-1660) when they began to subdue the wil- 
derness of New England. It was also the shared faith in the era 
of the American Revolution. It began to fade under the on- 
slaught of Darwinian evolutionary thought in the second half of 
the nineteenth century. It almost completely disappeared after 
World War I, but it is rapidly returning today. David Chilton's 
books on eschatology are now the primary manifesto in this re- 
vival of theological optimism. 

Today, the Christian Reconstruction movement has 
recruited some of the best and brightest young writers in the 
United States. Simultaneously, a major shift in eschatological 
perspective is sweeping through the charismatic movement. This 
combination of rigorous, disciplined, lively, dominion-oriented 
scholarship and the enthusiasm and sheer numbers of victory- 
oriented charismatic has created a major challenge to the famil- 
iar, tradition-bound, aging, and, most of all, present-oriented 
conservative Protestantism. It constitutes what could become 
the most important theological shift in American history, not 
simply in this century, but in the history of the nation. I expect 
this transformation to be visible by the year 2000- a year of 

xxi 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

considerable eschatological speculation. 

If I am correct, and this shift takes place, The Days of Ven- 
geance will be studied by historians as a primary source docu- 
ment for the next two or three centuries. 

Producing New Leaders: Key to Survival 

Because pessimillennialism could not offer students long- 
term hope in their earthly futures, both versions have defaulted 
culturally. This withdrawal from cultural commitment culmin- 
ated during the fateful years, 1965-71. When the world went 
through a psychological, cultural, and intellectual revolution, 
where were the concrete and specific Christian answers to the 
pressing problems of that turbulent era? Nothing of substance 
came from traditional seminaries. It was as if their faculty mem- 
bers believed that the world would never advance beyond the 
dominant issues of 1952. (And even back in 1952, seminary pro- 
fessors were mostly whispering.) The leaders of traditional 
Christianity lost their opportunity to capture the best minds of a 
generation. They were perceived as being muddled and confused. 
There was a reason for this. They were muddled and confused. 

In the 1970's, only two groups within the Christian commu- 
nity came before the Christian public and announced: "We have 
the biblical answers." 8 They were at opposite ends of the poli- 
tical spectrum: the liberation theologians on the Left and the 
Christian Reconstructionists on the Right. 9 The battle between 



8. Francis Schaeffer had been announcing since 1965 that humanist civiliza- 
tion is an empty shell, and that it has no earthly future. He repeated over and 
over that Christianity has the questions that humanism cannot answer. The 
problem was that as a Calvinistic premillennialist, he did not believe that any 
specifically Christian answers would ever be implemented before Christ's sec- 
ond coming. He did not devote much space in his books to providing specifi- 
cally Christian answers to the Christian questions that he raised to challenge 
humanist civilization. He asked excellent cultural questions; he offered few 
specifically Christian answers. There were reasons for this: Chilton and North, 
op. cit. 

9. In the highly restricted circles of amillennial Calvinism, a short-lived 
movement of North American Dutch scholars appeared, 1965-75, the "cosmo- 
nomic idea" school, also known as the neo-Dooyeweerdians, named after the 
Dutch legal scholar and philosopher, Herman Dooyeweerd. They made little 
impression outside of the North American Dutch community, and have since 
faded into obscurity. Their precursors in the early 1960s had been more conser- 
vative, but after 1965, too many of them became ideological fellow travelers 
of the liberation theologians. They could not compete with the harder-core 
radicalism represented by Sojourners and The Other Side, and they faded. 

xxii 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

these groups has intensified since then. Chilton's book, Produc- 
tive Christians in an Age of Guilt-Manipulators (1981), i0 is the 
most important single document in this theological confronta- 
tion. But from the confused middle, there have been no clear- 
cut Biblical answers to either of these two positions. 

The future of pessimillennialism is being eroded. As the 
world's social crises intensify, and as it becomes apparent that 
traditional conservative Protestantism still has no effective, spe- 
cific, workable answers to the crises of our day, a drastic and 
presently unanticipated shift of Christian opinion probably will 
take place - an event analogous to the collapse of a dam. There 
will be a revolution in the way millions of conservative Chris- 
tians think. Then there will be a revolution in what they do. 

The liberation theologians will not win this battle for the 
minds of Christians. There will be a religious backlash against 
the Left on a scale not seen in the West since the Bolshevik Rev- 
olution, and perhaps not since the French Revolution. At that 
point, only one group will possess in ready reserve a body of in- 
tellectual resources adequate for stemming the tide of human- 
ism: the Christian Reconstructionists, meaning those who 
preach dominion, and even more specifically, those who preach 
dominion by covenant. With this intellectual foundation, given 
the existence of catastrophic cultural, economic, and political 
conditions, they will take over leadership of conservative Prot- 
estantism. The existing Protestant leaders suspect this, and they 
do not like its implications. Nevertheless, they are unwilling or 
unable to do what is necessary to counter this development. 
Specifically, they are not producing the intellectual resources to 
counter what the Christian Reconstructionists are producing. 

Instead, they murmur. This tactic will fail. 

Silencing the Critics 
For over two decades, critics chided the Christian Recon- 
structionists with this refrain: "You people just haven't pro- 
duced any Biblical exegesis to prove your case for eschatological 
optimism." Then came Paradise Restored in 1985. A deathly 



10. David Chilton, Productive Christians in an Age of Guilt-Manipulators: 
A Biblical Response to Ronald J. Sider (4th ed.; Tyler, Texas: I nstitute for 
Christian Economics, 1986). 

xxiii 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

silence engulfed the formerly vociferous critics. Now comes The 
Days of Vengeance. The silence will now become deafening. 
Few critics will reply in print, I suspect, though if they refuse to 
reply, they have thereby accepted the validity of the coroner's 
report: death by strangulation (footnotes caught in the throat). 

Oh, there may be a few hastily written book reviews in un- 
read Christian scholarly journals. Dallas Seminary's Prof. 
Lightner may write one, like the one-page bit of fluff he wrote 
on Paradise Restored, in which he said, in effect, "See here, this 
man is a postmillennialist, and you need to understand that we 
here at Dallas Seminary aren't !" u There maybe a few brief dis- 
paraging remarks in popular paperback books about the insigni- 
ficant and temporary revival of full-scale dominion theology. 
But there will be no successful attempt by scholarly leaders of 
the various pessimillennial camps to respond to Chilton. There 
is a reason for this: They cannot effectively respond. As we say 
in Tyler, they just don't have the horses. If I am incorrect about 
their theological inability, then we will see lengthy, detailed ar- 
ticles showing why Chilton's book is utterly wrong. If we don't 
see them, you can safely conclude that our opponents are in 
deep trouble. To cover their naked flanks, they will be tempted 
to offer the familiar refrain: "We will not dignify such preposter- 
ous arguments with a public response." 

That is to say, they will run up the intellectual white flag. 

Chilton's critics will have a problem with this silent ap- 
proach, however. The problem is Professor Gordon Wenham, 
who wrote the Foreword. There is probably no more respected 
Bible-believing Old Testament commentator in the English- 
speaking world. His commentary on Leviticus sets a high in- 
tellectual standard. If Gordon Wenham says that The Days of 
Vengeance is worth considering, then to fail to consider it would 
be a major tactical error on the part of the pessimillenialists. 

I will go farther than Wenham does. This book is a landmark 
effort, the finest commentary on Revelation in the history of the 
Church. It has set the standard for: (1) its level of scholarship, 
(2) its innovative insights per page, and (3) its readability. This 
unique combination — almost unheard of in academic circles — 
leaves the intellectual opposition nearly defenseless. There may 



11. Bibliotheca Sacra (April-J une 1986). 

xxiv 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

be a few academic specialists who will respond competently to 
this or that point in The Days of Vengeance, but their technical 
essays will not be read widely, especially by the average pastor or 
layman. There may also be one or two theologians who attempt 
to respond comprehensively (though I doubt it), but their mud- 
dled expositions will win few new followers. (I have in mind a 
particular amillennial scholar who is known for his unique in- 
sights into Biblical symbolism, but whose writings communicate 
his ideas with the clarity of Zen Buddhist thought-teasers or 
Alexander Haig's press conferences.) 

Mainly, they face the tactical problem of calling attention to 
this book within their hermetically sealed followings. If their 
followers ever sit down and read The Days of Vengeance, Chris- 
tian Reconstructionism will pick off the best and the brightest of 
them. Why? Because earthly hope is easier to sell than earthly 
defeat, at least to people who are not happy to accept their con- 
dition as historical losers. A lot of Christians today are tired of 
losing. Even if it means starting to take responsibility - and that 
is precisely what dominion theology means — a growing number 
of bright, young Christians are ready to pay this price in order 
to stop losing. Thus, any extended discussion of this book be- 
comes a recruiting device for Christian Reconstructionism. Too 
many bright, young readers will be tipped off to the existence of 
dominion theology. 

Our opponents know this, so I do not expect to see any sys- 
tematic effort to refute Chilton on eschatology, any more than 
we have seen a book-long effort to refute Greg Bahnsen's 
Theonomy in Christian Ethics (1977)12 or R. J. Rushdoony's In- 
stitutes of Biblical Law (1973). 13 The potential critics have had 
plenty of time; they have not had plenty of definitive answers. I 
believe the reason is that the Bible's case for the continuing 
standard of Biblical law is too strong. Our opponents would 
prefer that we remain silent and stop raising these difficult ethi- 
cal questions. Our opponents are caught in a major dilemma. If 
they continue to fail to respond, their silence becomes a public 
admission of intellectual defeat. If they do respond, we have an 



12. 2nd edition, 1984. Published by Presbyterian& Reformed, Phillipsburg, 
N ew J ersey. 

13. Nutley, New J ersey: Craig Press, 1973. 



xxv 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

opportunity to reply — and the replies are where the academic 
debating points are always scored. When you fail to respond 
effectively to the replies, you lose the debate. Our opponents 
understand the rules of the academic game. They do not begin 
the confrontation. 

At the same time, they need our insights in order to make 
sense of at least parts of the Bible. I have seen copies of Rush- 
doony's Institutes for sale in the Dallas Theological Seminary 
Bookstore. They need his insights on Biblical law, yet they can- 
not deal with the underlying theology of his book. They simply 
dismiss him as somehow unimportant on such issues. They pre- 
tend that he has not offered a monumental challenge to dispen- 
sational ethics. M They pretend that they can successfully use his 
book as a kind of neutral reference work on the Old Testament 
case laws, and also somehow avoid losing their most energetic 
students to the Christian Reconstructionist movement. The ca- 
reer of Pastor Ray Sutton (a graduate of Dallas Theological 
Seminary) indicates that they have made a mistake. 

In a popularly written essay for a non-Christian audience, 
two fundamentalist authors insisted that while R. J. Rushdoony's 
insights on education and politics are used by fundamentalists, 
they do not take his kingdom views seriously. When their Chris- 
tian schools are brought to court by some arrogant state attor- 
ney general, they call in Rushdoony to take the witness stand for 
the defense. This has been going on since the mid-1970's. They 
need him. They know they need him. Yet his two fundamentalist 
critics went on to say that hardly anyone in the Christian world 
takes his views on the kingdom of God seriously. "Fortunately, 
we can say with confidence that he represents a very small group 
with absolutely no chance of achieving their agenda." 15 

In terms of numbers, they were correct: The Christian 
Reconstruction movement is small. In terms of young men who 



14. The one book-length attempt of any dispensationalist scholar to refute 
theonomists is an unpublished Dallas Theological Seminary doctoral disserta- 
tion: Ramesh Paul Richard's Hermeneutical Prolegomena to Premillennial 
Social Ethics (1982). It has not been published even in a reworked form. It is 
understandable why not: a terrible title. Worse, the dissertation gave away too 
much theological ground to the theonomists. This indicates the crisis facing 
dispensationalism today. 

15. Ed Dobson and Ed H indson, "Apocalypse Now?" Policy Review (Ott. 
1986), p. 20. 

xxvi 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

can write and speak and take leadership positions, the two 
authors were whistling by the graveyard — their own movement's 
graveyard. If traditional, pessimillennial fundamentalist intel- 
lectual leaders really had the academic answers to today's prob- 
lems in social, economic, and political life, they would not be 
drinking at the well of Christian Reconstructionism. But they 
are. They have no place else to go. 

I do not expect to see The Days of Vengeance for sale in the 
Dallas Seminary Bookstore. I do not expect to see it on any tra- 
ditional dispensational seminary's recommended reading list. If 
this book gains wide circulation among the next generation of 
dispensational pastors, there will be a sharp break of leadership 
within dispensationalism. The best and the brightest will be ab- 
sent. If Dallas Seminary students read it, and also read Paradise 
Restored, the professors at Dallas will be subjected to hard 
questioning, the likes of which they have never seen since that 
school was founded. (If the students also read Sutton's That 
You May Prosper, the faculty will have a theological revolution 
on its hands.) The faculty is not about to make this sort of 
short-run trouble for itself, even though in the longer run this 
conspiracy of silence will cost dispensationalism dearly. These 
books probably will not be sold at Grace Theological Seminary, 
either. And, just for the record, let me predict that you will not 
see Chilton's books recommended at non-dispensational seminar- 
ies either, for very similar reasons: They are too hot to handle. 

I will make myself perfectly clear: If the faculty members of 
any institution calling itself a Bible-believing theological semi- 
nary cannot risk assigning to their seniors, Chilton's Paradise 
Restored, Sutton's That You May Prosper, and Bahnsen's By 
This Standard- three short, easily read, minimally footnoted 
books - because they are afraid of disturbing their students' 
thinking, or because they themselves are not ready to provide 
answers to their students' inevitable questions, then that faculty 
has raised the white flag to the Christian Reconstructionists. It 
means that we Reconstructionists have won the theological 
fight. 

We are already picking off some of their brightest young 
men, and doing it on a regular basis. They read our books 
secretly, and they are waiting for their instructors to say some- 
thing in response. Their instructors are hiding. They are involved 

xxvii 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

in the child's game of "let's pretend." "Let's pretend that these 
books were never published. Let's pretend that our brightest 
students are not being picked off by them. Let's pretend that this 
flood of newsletters out of Tyler, Texas doesn't exist. Let's pre- 
tend that Christian Reconstructionism is going to go away soon. 
Let's pretend that someone else will write a book that answers 
them, and that it will be published early next year." This strategy 
is backfiring all over the country. The Christian Reconstruction- 
ists own the mailing lists that prove it. When seminary pro- 
fessors play a giant game of "let's pretend," it is only a matter of 
time. 

Frankly, it is highly doubtful that the average faculty mem- 
ber of the typical Bible-believing seminary is ready to assign my 
short paperback book aimed at teenagers: 75 Bible Questions 
Your Instructors Pray YouWon't Ask (1984). 16 This is why I am 
confident that the prevailing theological conservatism is about 
to be uprooted. Seminary faculties that need to be on the offen- 
sive against a humanist civilization are incapable of even de- 
fending their own positions from cheap paperback Christian 
books, let alone replace an entrenched humanist order. 

I will put it as bluntly as I can: Our eschatological opponents 
will not attack us in print, except on rare occasions. They know 
that we will respond in print, and that at that point they will be 
stuck. They want to avoid this embarrassment at any price — 
even the price of seeing their brightest young men join the 
Christian Reconstructionist movement. And, quite frankly, that 
suits us just fine. Heads, we win; tails, we win. 

Defenseless Traditionalists 

If any movement finds that it is being confronted by dedicated 
opponents who are mounting a full-scale campaign, it is suicidal to 
sit and do nothing. It is almost equally suicidal to do something 
stupid. What generally happens is that the leaders of comfortable, 
complacent, and intellectually flabby movements do nothing for 
too long, and then in a panic they rush out and do a whole series 
of stupid things, beginning with the publication of articles or 
books that are visibly ineffectual in the eyes of the younger men 
who would otherwise become the movement's future leaders. 



16. Published by Spurgeon Press, P.O. Box 7999, Tyler, Texas 75711. 

XXVIII 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

The most important tactic that the existing leadership can 
adopt is a program of convincing the movement's future leaders 
that the movement has the vision, the program, and the first 
principles to defeat all enemies. To be convincing, this tactic re- 
quires evidence for such superiority. Such evidence is presently 
lacking within traditional pessimillennial groups. They begin 
with the presupposition that God has not given His church the 
vision, program, and first principles to defeat God's enemies, 
even with Christ's victory over Satan at Calvary as the founda- 
tion of the Church's ministry. 

The traditional pessimillennialists have issued a clarion call: 
"Come join us; we're historical losers." They have built their in- 
stitutions by attracting people who are content to remain histor- 
ical (pre-second coming) losers. 

Understand that I am discussing traditional pessimillen- 
nialism. As the climate of Christian opinion shifts, we find that 
younger, energetic, and social action-oriented premillennialists 
and amillennialists are now appearing. This will continue. They 
insist that they can be kingdom optimists and social activists, 
too. They insist on being called members of the dominion theol- 
ogy movement. I do not see any evidence that they have been 
willing to go into print on how their eschatologies are con- 
formable to earthly, "Church Age" optimism, but I am happy to 
see them coming aboard the Good Ship Dominion. What I need 
to point out, however, is that in all the seminaries and in the 
large publishing houses, no such social optimism is visible yet. 
Traditional pessimists still run these institutions. This is going to 
change eventually, but it will probably take decades. 

Eschatological optimism is the first step in many people's 
journey into dominion theology. This is why the leaders with 
more traditional outlooks are so upset. They recognize that first 
step for what it is: the end of the road for pessimillennialism. 

Dispensationalism 

What most people do not understand is that there has not 
been a major dispensational commentary on the Book of Reve- 
lation since John Walvoord's The Revelation of Jesus Christ, 
published back in 1966 by Moody Press and reprinted repeat- 
edly. Even more significantly, there had not been a major 
dispensational commentary on Revelation before Walvoord's 

xxix 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

book. Understand, Walvoord's commentary appeared 96 years 
after W. E. B.'s Jesus Is Coming, the book that launched dispen- 
nationalism's popular phase in the United States. It appeared 
over half a century after the Scofield Reference Bible (1909). In 
short, the exegesis that supposedly proves the case for dispensa- 
tionalism came at the tail end of the dispensational movement's 
history, just about the time that R. J. Rushdoony had his initial 
social and law-oriented books published. The dispensationalists 
could point to only a handful of books with titles such as Lec- 
tures on Revelation or Notes on Revelation. In short, bits and 
pieces on Revelation, but nothing definitive - not after over a 
century of premillennial dispensationalism. The bibliography in 
Walvoord's book lists a small number of explicitly dispensa- 
tional commentaries on this book of the Bible, above all others, 
that we would expect the dispensationalists to have mastered, 
verse by verse. 

Whatever we conclude about the history of dispensational- 
ism, its wide popularity had very little to do with any systematic 
exposition of the book that dispensationalists assert is the most 
prophecy-filled book in the Bible. In fact, the average dispensa- 
tionalist probably does not own, has not read, and has never 
heard of a single dispensational commentary on the Book of 
Revelation. It is doubtful that his pastor knows of one, either, 
other than Walvoord's which is about half the size of Chilton's. 

In contrast, the publication of Chilton's two books on 
eschatology, along with Rushdoony' s far less exegetical book, 
Thy Kingdom Come (1970), in the early phases of the Christian 
Reconstruction movement places the foundational exegesis at 
the beginning, where it belongs. We now have the basic exegeti- 
cal work behind us. Chilton's first two eschatology books are 
seminal, not definitive. He and others will continue to build on 
their foundation. If they do not continue to build, then the 
movement is dead. Any movement that specializes in reprinting 
"classics" and does not produce path-breaking new material is 
dead. Our opponents will learn soon enough that this movement 
is not dead. We have just barely begun to publish. 

The point is, it is important to get the foundations laid early 
if you intend to reconstruct civilization. This is what the dispen- 
sationalists did not do, 1830-1966, perhaps because they never 
intended to change civilization. They intended only to escape 

xxx 



PUBLISHER'S PREFACE 

from what they regarded as modern civilization's more unsavory 
features, things such as liquor, cigarettes, movies, and social 
dancing. (I have often said that if anti-abortionists were to 
spread the rumor that the local abortionist gives a glass of beer 
to each woman to calm her nerves after an abortion, half the 
fundamentalists in town would be on the picket lines in front of 
his office within a week.) 

A millennialism 

Protestant amillennialists, who are primarily members of 
Dutch or Lutheran churches, or churches influenced by Con- 
tinental European theology, have a far stronger academic tradi- 
tion behind them. It stretches back to Augustine. Chilton draws 
from these amillennial traditions in explaining Biblical imagery. 
Nevertheless, Chilton has demonstrated that this imagery can be 
understood far better within a framework of historical Christian 
progress than within a framework that presumes increasing his- 
torical defeat at the hands of covenant-breakers. 

The fundamental message of Biblical eschatology is victory, 
in time and on earth (in history) - comprehensive victory, not 
simply a psychologically internal, "smile on our faces, joy in our 
hearts" sort of victory. In short, he makes effective use of their 
scholarly contributions, but he does not thereby become de- 
pendent on their underlying eschatological presuppositions. 
(Again, I have in mind a previously mentioned anonymous 
theologian, whose response to all this is easily predictable: lots 
more stony silence. Discretion is the better part of valor. He was 
thoroughly rebutted by another Reconstructionist on a related 
topic, so he is, understandably, a bit gun-shy.) 

The fact is, amillennialist churches are not noted for their 
evangelism programs. (Those that use the Coral Ridge Presby- 
terian Church's Evangelism Explosion materials are exceptions 
to this rule of thumb.) These churches are not out in the theo- 
logical arena, challenging humanists or anyone else. Members 
see their churches as holding actions, as defensive fortresses, or 
as ports in the cultural storm. These churches are simply not on 
the offensive. They do not expect to achieve anything culturally. 
They also do not expect to see a wave of converts. They proba- 

xxxi 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

bly will not lose many people to Christian Reconstructionism 
anytime soon. The slow erosion to liberalism and modernism 
and liberation theology will continue to plague them, as it has in 
the past, but there wili be no major defections. There will also 
be no major victories. They will remain spiritual, defensive out- 
posts in the midst of a turning point in world history. 

Historic Premillennialism 

There isn't any historic (non-dispensational) premillennial- 
ism, institutionally speaking. Historic premillennialists are scat- 
tered in churches that are dominated either by dispensational 
premillennialists or amillennialists. Covenant Theological Sem- 
inary does exist, but its graduates get swallowed up ecclesiastic- 
ally in churches that are eschatologically neutral officially, 
meaning churches run by amillennialists. Historic premillennial- 
ism has not been a separate theological force in this century. 

Conclusion 

David Chilton has provided us with a masterpiece. He has 
issued an epitaph: 

Pessimillennialism 

71 A.D.-1987A.D. 

"We preached defeat, and got it!" 

I am throwing down the gauntlet to the opponents of the 
Christian Reconstruction movement. lam challenging all com- 
ers, and I am doing it the smart way: "Let's you and Chilton 
fight ." Furthermore, "Let's you and Bahnsen fight." If anyone 
wants to fight me, I will switch on my word processor and give 
him my best shot, but I am such a sweet and inoffensive fellow 
that I don't expect that anyone will waste his time trying to beat 
me up. But someone in each of the rival pessimillennial camps 
had better start producing answers to what Christian Recon- 
structionists have already written. Specifically, someone had 
better be prepared to write a better commentary on Revelation 
than The Days of Vengeance. I am confident that nobody can. 

xxxii 



publisher's PREFACE 

From this time on, there will be only three kinds of commentar- 
ies on the Book of Revelation: 

Those that try to extend Chilton's 

Those that try to refute Chilton's 

Those that pretend there isn't Chilton's 

Tyler, Texas 
December 17, 1986 



XXXlll 



INTRODUCTION 

Author and Date 

Although the author's identity has been much debated, there 
is really no reason to doubt that he was the same St. John who 
wrote the Fourth Gospel, as the virtually unanimous testimony 
of the early Church affirms. He identifies himself simply as 
"John" (1:1, 4,9; 21:2;22:8), apparently assuming that he will be 
recognized by his first-century audience on the basis of his name 
alone; and he writes in an authoritative, "apostolic" style, not to 
individuals merely, but to the Church. Taking into account the 
Church's highly organized government, which existed from its 
inception, it is unlikely that any but a recognized apostle could 
have written in this manner. ] In addition, there are numerous 
points of resemblance between the Revelation and the Gospel of 
John. Even a cursory glance reveals several expressions (e.g. 
Lamb of God, Word, and witness) which are common only to 
the Gospel of John and the Revelation; no other New Testament 
writer uses these terms in the same way. 2 Austin Farrer 3 draws 
attention to a number of stylistic similarities between the Gospel 



1. Contrast this with the tone of St. Clement's letter to the Corinthians. As 
J . B. Lightfoot says in his edition of The Apostolic Fathers (Vol. I, p. 352): 
"Authority indeed is claimed for the utterances of the letter in no faltering 
tone, but it is the authority of the brotherhood declaring the mind of Christ by 
the Spirit, not the authority of one man, whether bishop or pope." Cited in 
J ohn A. T. Robinson, Redating the New Testament (Philadelphia: The West- 
minster Press, 1976), p. 328. 

2. See William Hendriksen, More Than Conquerors: An Interpretation of 
the Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1939), pp. 17ff., 
for a list of such similarities. For example, he cites J ohn7:37and Rev. 22:17; 
J ohn 10:18 and Rev. 2:27;J ohn 20:12 and Rev. 3:4;J ohn 1:1 and Rev. 19:13; 
J ohn 1:29 and Rev. 5:6, 

3. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), pp. 41ff. 



INTRODUCTION 

and Revelation: Both books are arranged in series of "sevens"; 
both are structured in terms of the Biblical/heavenly liturgy and 
festive calendar; and both books use numbers in a symbolic 
sense that transcends their literal significance (this is obvious in 
Revelation; cf. John 2:6, 19-20; 5:2,5; 6:7,9, 13; 8:57;13:38; 
19:14,23; 21:11, 14, 15-17). 

There are several Biblical indications that St. John was a 
priest, and even came from the high priest's family. 5 His name 
was probably common in that family (cf. Acts 4:6; contrast 
Luke 1:61). St. John himself tells us of his close relationship to 
the high priest: On account of this he was able, on an extremely 
sensitive occasion, to gain access into the high priest's Court, us- 
ing his influence with the guard to achieve entry for St. Peter as 
well (John 18:15-16). Moreover, numerous references in both the 
Gospel and Revelation reveal their author's unusual familiarity 
with the details of Temple services. As Alfred Edersheim ob- 
served, "the other New Testament writers refer to them in their 
narratives, or else explain their types, in such language as any 
well-informed worshipper at Jerusalem might have employed. 
But John writes not like an ordinary Israelite. He has eyes and 
ears for details which others would have left unnoticed. . . . 

"Indeed, the Apocalypse, as a whole, maybe likened to the 
Temple services in its mingling of prophetic services with wor- 
ship and praise. But it is specially remarkable, that the Temple- 
references with which the Book of Revelation abounds are gen- 
erally to minutiae, which a writer who had not been as familiar 
with such details, as only personal contact and engagement with 
them could have rendered him, would scarcely have even noticed, 
certainly not employed as part of his imagery. They come in nat- 
urally, spontaneously, and so unexpectedly, that the reader is oc- 



4. One minor example of this in J ohn is 1:9-2:11, which follows a seven-day 
structure patterned after the creation week; see David Chilton, Paradise 
Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 
1985), pp. 62f. 

5. This is, to some extent, substantiated in the tradition recorded inEuse- 
bius that as Bishop of Ephesus St. J ohn "was a priest, and wore the sacerdotal 
plate"- i.e., the petalon, insignia of the high priest worn on the forehead 
(Ecclesiastical History, v.xxiv). It is likely, of course, that St. J ohn and the 
other "ministers of the New Covenant" wore a distinctive "uniform" corre- 
sponding to their official status, and it is possible that their garments and 
"badge of office" were similar to those worn by the I sraelite priesthood. 



AUTHOR AND DATE 

casionally in danger of overlooking them altogether; and in lan- 
guage such as a professional man would employ, which would 
come to him from the previous exercise of his calling. Indeed, 
some of the most striking of these references could not have 
been understood at all without the professional treatises of the 
Rabbis on the Temple and its services. Only the studied minute- 
ness of Rabbinical descriptions, derived from the tradition of 
eye-witnesses, does not leave the same impression as the unstud- 
ied illustrations of St. John." 6 

"It seems highly improbable that a book so full of liturgical 
allusions as the Book of Revelation - and these, many of them, 
not to great or important points, but to minutiae — could have 
been written by any other than a priest, and one who had at one 
time been in actual service in the Temple itself, and thus become 
so intimately conversant with its details, that they came to him 
naturally, as part of the imagery he employed." 7 

In this connection Edersheim brings up a point that is more 
important for our interpretation than the issue of Revelation's 
human authorship (for ultimately [see 1:1] it is Jesus Christ's 
Revelation). St. John's intimate acquaintance with the minute 
details of Temple worship suggests that "the Book of Revelation 
and the Fourth Gospel must have been written before the Tem- 
ple services had actually ceased." 8 Although some scholars have 
uncritically accepted the statement of St. Irenaeus(A.D. 120-202) 
that the prophecy appeared "toward the end of Domitian's 
reign" (i. e., around a.d. 96), s' there is considerable room for 
doubt about his precise meaning (he may have meant that the 
Apostle John himself "was seen" by others). 10 The language of 
St. Irenaeus is somewhat ambiguous; and, regardless of what he 
was talking about, he could have been mistaken. ] ] (St. Irenaeus, 
incidentally, is the only source for this late dating of Revelation; 



6. Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry and Services as They Were 
at the Time of Christ (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
1980), pp. 141f. 

7. Ibid., p. 142. 

8. Ibid., p. 141. 

9. St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, v. xxx.3;quoted by Eusebius in h\sEccle- 
siasticcl History, Mi.xviii.2-3; v.viii,6. 

10. See Arthur Stapylton Barnes, Christianity at Rome in the Apostolic Age 
(London: Methuen Publishers, 1938), pp. 167ff, 

11. See the discussion in J ohn A. T. Robinson, Redating the New Testament 
(Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1976), pp. 221ff. 

3 



INTRODUCTION 

all other "sources" are simply quoting from him. It is thus rather 
disingenuous for commentators to claim, as Swete does, that 
"Early Christian tradition is almost unanimous in assigning the 
Apocalypse to the last years of Domitian.") 12 Certainly, there 
are other early writers whose statements indicate that St. John 
wrote the Revelation much earlier, under Nero's persecution. 13 

A good deal of the modern presumption in favor of a Domi- 
tianic date is based on the belief that a great, sustained period of 
persecution and slaughter of Christians was carried on under his 
rule. This belief, as cherished as it is, does not seem to be based 
on any hard evidence at all. While there is no doubt that Domi- 
tian was a cruel and wicked tyrant (I come to bury a myth about 
Caesar, not to praise him), until the fifth century there is no men- 
tion in any historian of a supposedly widespread persecution of 
Christians by his government. It is true that he did temporarily 
banish some Christians; but these were eventually recalled. Rob- 
inson remarks: "When this limited and selective purge, in which 
no Christian was for certain put to death, is compared with the 
massacre of Christians under Nero in what two early and entirely 
independent witnesses speak of as 'immense multitudes,' 14 it is 
astonishing that commentators should have been led by Irenaeus, 
who himself does not even mention a persecution, to prefer a 
Domitianic context for the book of Revelation. '>lj 

Our safest course, therefore, must be to study the Revelation 
itself to see what internal evidence it presents regarding its date. 
As we will see throughout the commentary, the Book of Revela- 
tion is primarily a prophecy of the destruction of Jerusalem by 
the Remans. This fact alone places St. John's authorship some- 
where before September of a.d. 70. Further, as we shall see, St. 
John speaks of Nero Caesar as still on the throne -and Nero 
died in June 68. 



12. H . B. Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publi- 
cations, [19111 1977), p. xcix. 

13. See the detailed discussion in Moses Stuart, Commentary on the Apoca- 
lypse (Andover: Allen, Merrill and Wardwell, 1845), Vol. I, pp. 263-84; see , 
alsoj ames M . MacDonald, The Life and Writings of St. John (London: Hod- 
der and Stoughton, 1877), pp. 151-77. 

14. Robinson has in mind the statements of the Christian pastor St. Clem- 
ent (lClement6) and the heathen historian Tacitus (Annals xv.44). 

75. Robinson, p. 233; cf. pp. 236ff. 



AUTHOR AND DATE 

More important than any of this, however, we have a priori 
teaching from Scripture itself that all special revelation ended by 
a.d, 70. The angel Gabriel told Daniel that the "seventy weeks" 
were to end with the destruction of Jerusalem (Dan. 9:24-27); 
and that period would also serve to "seal up the vision and 
prophecy" (Dan. 9:24). In other words, special revelation would 
stop - be "sealed up" - by the time Jerusalem was destroyed. 
The Canon of Holy Scripture was entirely completed before 
Jerusalem fell. 16 St. Athanasius interpreted Gabriel's words in 
the same way: "When did prophet and vision cease from Israel? 
Was it not when Christ came, the Holy One of holies? It is, in 
fact, a sign and notable proof of the coming of the Word that 
Jerusalem no longer stands, neither is prophet raised up nor 
vision revealed among them. And it is natural that it should be 
so, for when He that was signified had come, what need was 
there any longer of any to signify Him? And when the Truth had 
come, what further need was there of the shadow? On His 
account only they prophesied continually, until such time as 
Essential Righteousness had come, Who was made the Ransom 
for the sins of all. For the same reason Jerusalem stood until the 
same time, in order that there men might premeditate the types 
before the Truth was known. So, of course, once the Holy One 
of holies had come, both vision and prophecy were sealed. And 
the kingdom of Jerusalem ceased at the same time, because 
kings were to be anointed among them only until the Holy of 
holies had been anointed. . . . 

"The plain fact is, as I say, that there is no longer any king or 
prophet nor Jerusalem nor sacrifice nor vision among them; yet 
the whole earth is filled with the knowledge of God, 17 and the 
Gentiles, forsaking atheism, are now taking refuge with the God 



16. While he does not base his case on theological considerations, this is 
J . A. T. Robinson's thesis inRedating the New Testament. He arrives at this 
conclusion through a careful study of both the internal and external evidence 
regarding each New Testament book. Support from archeological findings for 
an early New Testament is presented in David Estrada and William WhiteJ r., 
The First New Testament (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1978). See also Ernest L. 
Martin, The Original Bible Restored (Pasadena: Foundation for Biblical 
Research, 1984), for his interesting thesis that the New Testament was canonized 
by St. Peter and St. J ohn. 

17. St. Athanasius, the "patron saint of postmillennialism,"thus applies the 
"millennial" promise of Isaiah 11:9 to the triumphs of the New Covenant era. 

5 



INTRODUCTION 

of Abraham through the Word, our Lord Jesus Christ ," 18 

The death, resurrection and ascension of Christ marked the 
end of the Old Covenant and the beginning of the New; the 
apostles were commissioned to deliver Christ's message in the 
form of the New Testament; and when they were finished, God 
sent the Edomites and the Roman armies to destroy utterly the 
last remaining symbols of the Old Covenant: the Temple and the 
Holy City. This fact alone is sufficient to establish the writing of 
the Revelation as taking place before a.d. 70. The book itself 
gives abundant testimony regarding its date; but, even more, the 
nature of the New Testament as God's Final Word tells us this. 
Christ's death at the hands of the apostate children of Israel 
sealed their fate: The Kingdom would be taken from them 
(Matt. 21:33-43). While wrath built up "to the utmost" (1 Thess. 
2:16), God stayed His hand of judgment until the writing of the 
New Covenant document was accomplished. With that done, 
He dramatically terminated the kingdom of Israel, wiping out 
the persecuting generation (Matt. 23:34-36; 24:34; Luke 
11:49-51). Jerusalem's destruction was the last blast of the trum- 
pet, signaling that the "mystery of God" was finished (Rev. 
10:7). There would be no further canonical writings once Israel 
was gone. 

Destination 
From his exile on the island of Patmos, St. John addressed 
the Revelation to the churches in seven major cities of Asia 
Minor. These seven cities, connected by a semicircular road that 
ran through the interior of the province, served as postal 
stations for their districts. "So a messenger from Patmos landed 
at Ephesus, traveled north through Smyrna to Pergamum, and 
thence southeast through the other four cities, leaving a copy of 
the book in each for secondary circulation in its district. The 
number 'seven' is of course constantly used in the symbolism of 
the book of Revelation, but this fact should not be allowed to 



18. St. Athanasius, On the Incarnation, Sister Penelope Lawson, Trans. 
(New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1946), pp. 61ff.RousasJ ohn Rush- 
doony makes the same point in his exposition of Dan. 9:24:" Vision and 
prophet' will be sealed up or ended, the New Testament revelation of Christ 
summing up and concluding the Scriptures." Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in 
Daniel and Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn P ress, [1970] 1978), p. 66. 



DESTINATION 

obscure the circumstance that the book is addressed to seven ac- 
tual churches in cities ideally placed to serve as the distribution 
points." 19 

Asia Minor was a significant destination for two reasons: 
First, after the fall of Jerusalem the province of Asia would 
become the most influential center of Christianity in the Roman 
Empire: "The province of Asia emerged as the area where Chris- 
tianity was strongest, with Ephesus as its radial point ."2° Sec- 
ond, Asia was the center of the cult of Caesar-worship. "Inscrip- 
tion after inscription testifies to the loyalty of the cities towards 
the Empire. At Ephesus, at Smyrna, at Pergamum, and indeed 
throughout the province the Church was confronted by an im- 
perialism which was popular and patriotic, and bore the charac- 
ter of a religion. Nowhere was the Caesar-cult more popular 
than in Asia." 21 

After Julius Caesar died (29 B.C.), a temple honoring him as 
divus (god) was built in Ephesus. The Caesars who followed him 
didn't wait for death to provide such honors, and, beginning 
with Octavian, they asserted their own divinity, displaying their 
titles of deity in temples and on coins, particularly in the cities 
of Asia. Octavian changed his name to Augustus, a title of 
supreme majesty, dignity and reverence. He was called the Son 
of God, and as the divine-human mediator between heaven and 
earth he offered sacrifices to the gods. He was widely proclaimed 
as the Savior of the world, and the inscriptions on his coins were 
quite frankly messianic - their message declaring, as Stauffer 
has written, that "salvation is to be found in none other save 
Augustus, and there is no other name given to men in which 
they can be saved."2 2 

This pose was common to all the Caesars. Caesar was God; 
Caesar was Savior; Caesar was the only Lord. And they claimed 
not only the titles but the rights of deity as well. They taxed and 



19. C. J . Hemer, "Seven Cities of Asia Minor," in R. K. Harrison, cd., 
Major Cities of the Biblical World (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 
1985), p. 235. 

20. W. H. C. F rend, The Rise of Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 
1984), p. 127. 

21. H . B. Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publi- 
cations, [19111 1977), p. Ixxxix. 

22. Ethelbert Stauffer, Christ and the Caesars (Philadelphia: Westminster 
Press, 1955), p. 88. 

7 



INTRODUCTION 

confiscated property at will, took citizens' wives (and husbands) 
for their own pleasure, caused food shortages, exercised the 
power of life and death over their subjects, and generally at- 
tempted to rule every aspect of reality throughout the Empire. 
The philosophy of the Caesars can be summed up in one phrase 
which was used increasingly as the age progressed: Caesar is 
Lord! 

This was the main issue between Rome and the Christians: 
Who is Lord? Francis Schaeffer points out: "Let us not forget 
why the Christians were killed. They were not killed because 
they worshiped Jesus. . . . Nobody cared who worshiped whom 
so long as the worshiper did not disrupt the unity of the state, 
centered in the formal worship of Caesar. The reason the Chris- 
tians were killed was because they were rebels. . . . They wor- 
shiped Jesus as God and they worshiped the infinite-personal 
God only. The Caesars would not tolerate this worshiping of the 
one God only. It was counted as treason."2 3 

For Rome, the goal of any true morality and piety was the 
subordination of all things to the State; the religious, pious man 
was the one who recognized, at every point in life, the centrality 
of Rome. "The function of Roman religion was pragmatic, to 
serve as social cement and to buttress the state."2" Thus, ob- 
serves R. J. Rushdoony, "the framework for the religious and 
familial acts of piety was Rome itself, the central and most sac- 
red community. Rome strictly controlled all rights of corpora- 
tion, assembly, religious meetings, clubs, and street gatherings, 
and it brooked no possible rivalry to its centrality. . . . The 
state alone could organize; short of conspiracy, the citizens 
could not. On this ground alone, the highly organized Christian 
Church was an offense and an affront to the state, and an illegal 
organization readily suspected of conspiracy."2 5 

The witness of the apostles and the early Church was noth- 
ing less than a declaration of war against the pretensions of the 
Roman State. St. John asserted that Jesus is the only-begotten 
Son of God (John 3:16); that He is, in fact, "the true God and 



23. Francis A. Schaeffer, How Shall We Then Live? (Old Tappan, NJ : 
Fleming H . Revell, 1976), p. 24. 

24. RousasJ ohn Rushdoony, The One and the Many: Studies in the Philos- 
ophy of Order andUltimacy (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1971] 1978), p. 92. 

25. Ibid., pp. 92f. 



DESTINATION 

eternal life" (1 John 5:20-21). The Apostle Peter declared, shortly 
after Pentecost: "Salvation is found in no one else, for there is 
no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be 
saved" (Acts 4:12). "The conflict of Christianity with Rome was 
thus political from the Roman perspective, although religious 
from the Christian perspective. The Christians were never asked 
to worship Rome's pagan gods; they were merely asked to recog- 
nize the religious primacy of the state. As Francis Legge ob- 
served, 'The officials of the Roman Empire in time of persecu- 
tion sought to force the Christians to sacrifice, not to any 
heathen gods, but to the Genius of the Emperor and the Fortune 
of the City of Rome; and at all times the Christians' refusal was 
looked upon not as a religious but as a political offense. . . .' The 
issue, then, was this: should the emperor's law, state law, govern 
both the state and the church, or were both state and church, 
emperor and bishop alike, under God's law? Who represented 
true and ultimate order, God or Rome, eternity or time? The 
Roman answer was Rome and time, and hence Christianity con- 
stituted a treasonable faith and a menace to political order." 26 

The charge brought by the Jewish prosecution in one first- 
century trial of Christians was that "they are all defying Caesar's 
decrees, saying that there is another king, one called Jesus" 
(Acts 17:7). This was the fundamental accusation against all the 
Christians of the Empire. The captain of police pleaded with the 
aged Bishop of Smyrna, St. Polycarp, to renounce this extreme 
position: "What harm is there in saying Caesar is Lord ?" St. 
Polycarp refused, and was burned at the stake. Thousands 
suffered martyrdom on just this issue. For them, Jesus was not 
"God" in some upper-story, irrelevant sense; He was the only 
God, complete Sovereign in every area. No aspect of reality 
could be exempt from His demands. Nothing was neutral. The 
Church confronted Rome with the inflexible claim of Christ's 
imperial authority: Jesus is the only-begotten Son; Jesus is God; 
Jesus is King; Jesus is Savior; Jesus is Lord. Here were two Em- 
pires, both attempting absolute world domination; and they 
were implacably at war. 27 



26. I bid., p. 93. Rushdoony cites F rands Legge, Forerunners and Rivals of 
Christianity. ' From 330 B.C. to 330 A.D.(New Hyde Park, NY: University 
Books, [1915], 1964), vol. I , pp. xxivf. 

27. Cf. Swete, p. lxxxi. 



INTRODUCTION 

It was necessary for the churches of Asia to recognize this 
fully, with all its implications. Faith in Jesus Christ requires ab- 
solute submission to His Lordship, at every point, with no com- 
promise. The confession of Christ meant conflict with statism, 
particularly in the provinces where official worship of Caesar 
was required for the transaction of everyday affairs. Failure to 
acknowledge the claims of the State would result in economic 
hardship and ruin, and often imprisonment, torture, and death. 

Some Christians attempted to compromise by drawing an 
unbiblical distinction between heart and conduct, as if one 
could have faith without works. But Christ's Kingdom is univer- 
sal: Jesus is Lord of all. To acknowledge Him truly as Lord, we 
must serve Him everywhere. This was the primary message of 
the Revelation to the Christians in Asia, and one they desper- 
ately needed to hear. They lived in the very heart of Satan's 
throne, the seat of Emperor- worship; St. John wrote to remind 
them of their true King, of their position with Him as kings and 
priests, and of the necessity to persevere in terms of His sover- 
eign Word. 

Revelation and the Covenant 

The Book of Revelation is part of the Bible. At first glance 
this may not seem to be a brilliant insight, but it is a point that is 
both crucially important and almost universally neglected in the 
actual practice of exposition. For as soon as we recognize that 
Revelation is a Biblical document, we are forced to ask a central 
question: What sort of book is the Bible? And the answer is 
this: The Bible is a book (The Book) about the Covenant. The 
Bible is not an Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. Nor is it a 
collection of Moral Tales, or a series of personal-psychology 
studies of Great Heroes of Long Ago. The Bible is God's written 
revelation of Himself, the story of His coming to us in the Medi- 
ator, the Lord Jesus Christ; and it is the story of the Church's 
relationship to Him through the Covenant He has established 
with her. 

The Covenant is the meaning of Biblical history (Biblical 
history is not primarily adventure stories). The Covenant is the 
meaning of Biblical law (the Bible is not primarily a political 
treatise about how to set up a Christian Republic). And the 
Covenant is the meaning of Biblical prophecy as well (thus, 

10 



REVELATION AND THE COVENANT 

Biblical prophecy is not "prediction" in the occult sense of Nos- 
tradamus, Edgar Cayce, and Jean Dixon). To a man, the proph- 
ets were God's legal emissaries to Israel and the nations, acting 
as prosecuting attorneys bringing what has become known 
among recent scholars as the "Covenant Lawsuit ." 

That Biblical prophecy is not simply "prediction" is indi- 
cated, for example, by God's statement through Jeremiah: 

At one moment I might speak concerning a nation or con- 
cerning a kingdom to uproot, to pull down, or to destroy it; if 
that nation against which I have spoken turns from its evil, I will 
relent concerning the calamity I planned to bring on it. 

Or at another moment I might speak concerning a nation or 
concerning a kingdom to build up or to plant it; if it does evil in 
My sight by not obeying My voice, then I will repent of the good 
with which I had promised to bless it. (Jer. 18:7-10) 

The purpose of prophecy is not "prediction," but evaluation 
of man's ethical response to God's Word of command and 
promise. This is why Jonah's prophecy about Nineveh did not 
"come true": Nineveh repented of its wickedness, and the 
calamity was averted. Like the other Biblical writings, the Book 
of Revelation is a prophecy, with a specific covenantal orienta- 
tion and reference. When the covenantal context of the proph- 
ecy is ignored, the message St. John sought to communicate is 
lost, and Revelation becomes nothing more than a vehicle for 
advancing the alleged expositor's eschatological theories. 

Let us consider a minor example: Revelation 9:16 tells us of a 
great army of horsemen, numbering "myriads of myriads." In 
some Greek texts, this reads two myriads of myriads, and is 
sometimes translated 200 million. All sorts of fanciful and con- 
trived explanations have been proposed for this. Perhaps the 
most well-known theory of recent times is Hal Lindsey's opinion 
that "these 200 million troops are Red Chinese soldiers accom- 
panied by other Eastern allies. It's possible that the industrial 
might of Japan will be united with Red China. For the first time 
in history there will be a full invasion of the West by the 
Orient ."2 8 Such fortunetelling may or may not be accurate 



28. Hal Lindsey, There's a New World Coming (Eugene, OR: Harvest 
House Publishers, 1973), p. 140. 

11 



INTRODUCTION 

regarding a coming Chinese invasion, but it tells us absolutely 
nothing about the Bible. To help put Lindsey's view into histor- 
ical perspective, we will compare it to that of J. L. Martin, a 
19th-century preacher who, while sharing Lindsey's basic pre- 
suppositions about the nature and purpose of prophecy, reached 
the different, and amusing, conclusion that St. John's "200 mil- 
lion" represented "the fighting force of the whole world" of 
1870. Note Martin's shrewdly scientific, Lindsey-like reasoning: 

We have a few more than one billion inhabitants on the 
earth. . . . But of that billion about five hundred millions (one- 
half) are females, leaving an average population of male inhabit- 
ants of about five hundred millions; and of that number about 
one-half are minors, leaving about two hundred and fifty mil- 
lions of adult males on the earth at a time. But of that number of 
adult males about one-fifth are superannuated - too old to fight. 
These are statistical facts. This leaves exactly J ohn's two hun- 
dred millions of fighting men on earth. And when we prove a 
matter mathematically, we think it is pretty well done. 29 

But Martin is just hitting his stride. He continues with his ex- 
position, taking up the terrifying description of the soldiers in 
9:17-19: "The riders had breastplates of fire and of hyacinth and 
of brimstone; and the heads of the horses are like the heads of 
lions; and out of their mouths proceed fire and smoke and brim- 
stone. A third of mankind was killed by these three plagues, by 
the fire and the smoke and the brimstone, which proceeded out 
of their mouths. For the power of the horses is in their mouths 
and in their tails; for their tails are like serpents and have heads; 
and with them they do harm." Whereas modern apocalyptists 
view this in terms of lasers and missile launchers, Martin had a 
different explanation - one which was in keeping with the state 
of military art in his day, when Buffalo Bill was fighting Sioux 
Indians as chief of scouts for General Sheridan's Fifth Cavalry: 

John is pointing to the modern mode of fighting on horse- 
back, with the rider leaning forward, which, to his sight, and to 
the sight of one looking on at a distance, would appear as the 



29. J . L . M arti n, The Voice of the Seven Thunders: or, Lectures on the Apoc- 
alypse (Bedford, IN: J ames M. Mathes, Publisher, sixth cd., 1873), pp. 149f. 

12 



THE COVENANT LAWSUIT 

great mane of the lion; the man leaning on his horse's neck. He 
would, in fighting with firearms, have to lean forward to dis- 
charge his piece, lest he might shoot down his own horse that he 
was riding. In J ohn's day the posture was very different. . . . 
Now, I want to ask my friendly hearers if it is not as literally ful- 
filled before our eyes as anything can be? Are not all nations en- 
gaged in this mode of warfare? Do they not kill men with fire 
and smoke and brimstone? . . . Do you not know that this is 
just ignited gunpowder? . . . 

Could an uninspired man, in the last of the first century, have 
told of this matter? 30 

Unless we see the Book of Revelation as a Covenant docu- 
ment — i.e., if we insist on reading it primarily as either a predic- 
tion of twentieth-century nuclear weapons or a polemic against 
first-century Rome - its continuity with the rest of the Bible will 
be lost. It becomes an eschatological appendix, a view of "last 
things" that ultimately has little to do with the message, pur- 
pose, and concerns of the Bible. Once we understand Revela- 
tion's character as a Covenant Lawsuit, however, it ceases to be 
a "strange," "weird" book; it is no longer incomprehensible, or 
decipherable only with the complete New York Times Index. In 
its major themes at least, it becomes as accessible to us as Isaiah 
and Amos. The Book of Revelation must be seen from the out- 
set in its character as Biblical revelation. The grasp of this single 
point can mean a "quantum leap" for interpretation; for, as 
Geerhardus Vos made clear in his pathbreaking studies of Bib- 
lical Theology, "revelation is connected throughout with the fate 
of Israel." 31 

The Covenant Lawsuit 

God's relationship with Israel was always defined in terms of 
the Covenant, the marriage bond by which He joined her to 
Himself as His special people. This Covenant was a legal ar- 
rangement, a binding "contract" imposed on Israel by her King, 
stipulating mutual obligations and promises. Meredith Kline has 



30. Ibid., pp. I51f. 

31. Richard B. GaffinJ r., ed., Redemptive History and Biblical Interpreta- 
tion: The Shorter Writings of Geerhardus Vos (Phillipsburg, NJ : Presbyterian 
and Reformed Publishing Co., 1980), p. 10. 

13 



INTRODUCTION 

shown that the structure of the Biblical Covenant bears striking 
similarities to the established form for peace treaties in the an- 
cient Near East. 32 This is how it worked: After a war, the victor- 
ious king would make a covenant with his defeated foe, making 
certain promises and guaranteeing protection on condition that 
the vassal-king and all under his authority would obey their new 
lord. Both lord and vassal would swear an oath, and they would 
thenceforth be united in covenant. 

As Kline explains, the standard treaty-form in the ancient 
world was structured in five parts, all of which appear in the 
Biblical covenants: 

1. Preamble (identifying the lordship of the Great King, 

stressing both his transcendence [greatness and power] and his 
immanence [nearness and presence]); 

2. Historical Prologue (surveying the lord's previous rela- 
tionship to the vassal, especially emphasizing the blessings be- 
stowed); 

3. Ethical Stipulations (expounding the vassal's obligations, 
his "guide to citizenship" in the covenant); 

4. Sanctions (outlining the blessings for obedience and 
curses for disobedience); 

5. Succession Arrangements (dealing with the continuity of 
the covenant relationship over future generations). 

One of the best examples of a document written in this 
treaty-form is the Book of Deuteronomy, which Kline examines 
in detail in his Treaty of the Great King. (Recently, Kline's analy- 
sis has been considerably augmented in the more theologically 
oriented work of Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper.) 33 
Kline's exposition shows how Deuteronomy naturally divides 
into the five covenantal sections: 



32. Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Structure 
of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1963); 
idem., The Structure of Biblical A uthority (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerd- 
mans Publishing Co., second ed., 1975). 

33. Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion by Covenant (Tyler, 
TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

14 



THE COVENANT LAWSUIT 

Deuteronomy 

1. Preamble (1:1-5) 

2. Historical Prologue (1:6-4:49) 

3. Ethical Stipulations (5:1-26:19) 

4. Sanctions (27:1-30:20) 

5. Succession Arrangements (31:1-34:12) 

If a vassal kingdom violated the terms of the covenant, the 
lord would send messengers to the vassal, warning the offenders 
of coming judgment, in which the curse-sanctions of the cove- 
nant would be enforced. This turns out to be the function of the 
Biblical prophets, as I mentioned above: They were prosecuting 
attorneys, bringing God's message of Covenant Lawsuit to the 
offending nations of Israel and Judah. And the structure of the 
lawsuit was always patterned after the original structure of the 
covenant. In other words, just as the Biblical covenants them- 
selves follow the standard five-part treaty structure, the Biblical 
prophecies follow the treaty form as well. 34 For example, the 
prophecy of Hosea is ordered according to the following out- 
line: 

Hoses 

1. Preamble (1) 

2. Historical Prologue (2-3) 

3. Ethical Stipulations (4-7) 

4. Sanctions (8-9) 

5. Succession Arrangements (10-14) 

Like many other Biblical prophecies, the Book of Revelation 
is a prophecy of Covenant wrath against apostate Israel, which 
irrevocably turned away from the Covenant in her rejection of 
Christ. And, like many other Biblical prophecies, the Book of 
Revelation is written in the form of the Covenant Lawsuit, with 
five parts, conforming to the treaty structure of the Covenant. 
This thesis will be demonstrated in the commentary; by way of 
introduction, however, it will be helpful to glance at some of the 
major points that lead to this conclusion. (Also, I have provided 



34. Incidentally, the point is not that Scripture is modeled after pagan 
treaties; rather, as Sutton argues, the pagan treaty-forms were ultimately 
derived from God's Covenant. 

15 



INTRODUCTION 

an Introduction to each of the five parts of Revelation, correlat- 
ing the message of each section with the appropriate passage in 
the Book of Deuteronomy.) 

In order to grasp the five-part structure of Revelation, we 
must first consider how St. John's prophecy is related to the 
message of Leviticus 26. Like Deuteronomy 28, Leviticus 26 sets 
forth the sanctions of the Covenant: If Israel obeys God, she 
will be blessed in every area of life (Lev. 26:1-13; Deut. 28:1-14); 
if she disobeys, however, she will be visited with the Curse, spelled 
out in horrifying detail (Lev. 26:14-39; Deut. 28:15-68). (These 
curses were most fully poured out in the progressive desolation 
of Israel during the Last Days, culminating in the Great Tribula- 
tion of a.d. 67-70, as punishment for her apostasy and rejection 
of her True Husband, the Lord Jesus Christ. )35 One of the strik- 
ing features of the Leviticus passage is that the curses are ar- 
ranged in a special pattern: Four times in this chapter God says, 
"I will punish you seven times for your sins" (Lev. 26:18,21,24, 
28). The number seven, as we will see abundantly throughout 
Revelation, is a Biblical number for completeness or fullness 
(taken from the seven-day pattern laid down at the creation in 
Genesis l). 36 The number four is used in Scripture in connection 
with the earth, especially the Land of Israel; thus four rivers 
flowed out of Eden to water the whole earth (Gen. 2:10); the 
Land, like the Altar, is pictured as having four corners (Is a. 
11:12; cf. Ex. 27:1-2), from which the four winds blow (Jer. 
49:36); the camp of Israel was arranged in four groups around 
the sides of the Tabernacle (Num. 2); and so on (see your con- 
cordance and Bible dictionary). So by speaking of four seven- 
fold judgments in Leviticus 26, God is saying that a full, com- 
plete judgment will come upon the Land of Israel for its sins. 
This theme is taken up by the prophets in their warnings to 
Israel: 



35. The Biblical expression Last Days properly refers to the period from the 
Advent of Christ until the destruction of J erusalem in a.d. 70, the "last days" 
of Israel during the transition period from the Old Covenant to the New Cove- 
nant (H eb. 1:1-2;8:13; J ames 5:1-9; 1 Pet. 1:20; 1 J ohn 2:18). See David Chil- 
ton, Paradise Restored, pp. 77-122, 237-90; cf. my series of studies on this sub- 
ject, published in the Geneva Review, P.O. Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. 

36. The number seven alone is used fifty-four times in Revelation; and there 
are many examples (more than I have attempted to count) of words and 
phrases mentioned seven times, or clustered together in groups of sevens. 

16 



THE COVENANT LAWSUIT 

And I shall appoint over them four kinds of doom, declares 
the LoRD: the sword to slay, the dogs to drag off, and the birds of 
the sky and the beasts of the earth to devour and destroy. (Jer. 15:3) 

Thus says the Lord God: I shall send My four evil judgments 
against Jerusalem: sword, famine, wild beasts, and plague to cut 
off man and beast from it! (Ezek. 14:21) 

The imagery of a sevenfold judgment coming four times is 
most fully developed in the Book of Revelation, which is expli- 
citly divided into four sets of seven: the Letters to the Seven 
Churches, the opening of the Seven Seals, the sounding of the 
Seven Trumpets, and the outpouring of the Seven Chalices. 37 In 
thus following the formal structure of the covenantal curse in 
Leviticus, St. John underscores the nature of his prophecy as a 
declaration of covenant wrath against Jerusalem. 

The four judgments are preceded by an introductory vision, 
which serves to highlight the transcendence and immanence of 
the Lord - precisely the function of the Preamble in the cove- 
nantal treaties. As we read through the four series of judgments, 
we find that they also conform to the treaty outline: The Seven 
Letters survey the history of the covenant; the Seven Seals have 
to do with the specific stipulations set forth in the corresponding 
section of the covenantal treaty; the Seven Trumpets invoke the 
covenant sanctions; and the angels of the Seven Chalices are in- 
volved in both the disinheritance of Israel and the Church's suc- 
cession in the New Covenant. Thus: 

Revelation 

1. Preamble: Vision of the Son of Man (1) 

2. Historical Prologue: The Seven Letters (2-3) 

3. Ethical Stipulations: The Seven Seals (4-7) 

4. Sanctions: The Seven Trumpets (8-14) 

5. Succession Arrangements: The Seven Chalices (15-22) 

St. John has thus combined the four-part Curse outline of 
Leviticus 26 with the familiar five-part outline of the Covenant 



37. Most commentaries, it is true, seek to find seven or more sets of seven, 
but in doing so they are not adhering to St. J ohn's formal outline. Certainly, 
there is nothing wrong with attempting to discover the many subtle structures 
of the book; but we must at least begin with the author's explicit arrangement 
before making refinements. 

17 



INTRODUCTION 

Lawsuit. The intersection of a fourfold and fivefold curse is 
related to another dimension of Biblical imagery, relating to the 
laws of multiple restitution. Exodus 22:1 commands: "If a man 
steals an ox or a sheep, and slaughters it or sells it, he shall pay 
five oxen for the ox and four sheep for the sheep." James B. Jor- 
dan explains the symbolic aspects of this case law: "These are 
the animals which particularly symbolize humanity in the sacri- 
ficial system. They are, thus, repeatedly set forth as preeminent 
analogies for men (cf. e.g., Lev. 22:27, with Lev. 12). 

"We should note here that the verb used in Exodus 22:1, 
'slaughter,' is used almost always with reference to men. Ralph 
H. Alexander comments, 'The central meaning of the root oc- 
curs only three times (Gen. 43: 16; Ex. 22:1; 1 Sam. 25:11). The 
root is predominantly used metaphorically, portraying the 
Lord's judgment upon Israel and upon Babylon as a slaughter.' 38 
This again points to a basic symbolic meaning of this law." 39 

Jordan goes on to show that in Scripture the ox primarily 
represents the office-bearer in Israel, while the sheep represents 
the ordinary citizen, and especially the poor man. Fourfold res- 
titution is thus required for the crime of oppressing the poor, 
and fivefold restitution is required for the penalty of rebellion 
against authorit y. 40 The Covenant Lawsuit is structured in terms 
of the penalty of fivefold restitution, since the rebels against the 
covenant are revolting against their divinely ordained authority; 
and St. John brings the lawsuit against Israel because she has re- 
belled against Jesus Christ, her Lord and High Priest (Heb. 
2:17; 7:22-8:6). 

But Christ was also a sheep, the sacrificial Lamb of God 
(John 1:29; Rev. 5:6,9). He was wrongfully sold (Matt. 26:14-15), 
and was treated "like a lamb that is led to slaughter" (Isa. 53:7). 
Moreover, the early Christians were largely poor, and were per- 
secuted, oppressed, and slaughtered by the wealthy and power- 
ful of apostate Israel (Matt. 5:10-12; Luke 6:20-26; James 5:1-6). 
Unbelieving Israel thus brought upon herself all the penalties 
and curses of the covenant, including fourfold and fivefold as 



38. R. Laird Harris, Gleason Archer, and Bmce Waltke, eds., Theological 
Wordbook of the Old Testament (Chicago: Moody Press, 1980), p. 341. 

39. J ames B. J ordan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 
21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), p. 266. 

40. Ibid., pp. 266-71. 

18 



THE COVENANT LAWSUIT 

well as double restitution (Rev. 18:6). (It is also worth repeating 
what Ralph Alexander said about the word slaughter in Exodus 
22:1: "The root is predominantly used metaphorically, portray- 
ing the Lord's judgment upon Israel and upon Babylon as a 
slaughter." As we will see, St. John brings these ideas together, 
metaphorically calling the apostate Jerusalem of his day Baby- 
lon the Great ) The Great Tribulation, culminating in the holo- 
caust of a.d. 70, was the restitution demanded for its theft and 
slaughter of the Old Testament prophets, of the New Testament 
martyrs, and of the Lord Jesus Christ (Matt. 21:33-45; 23:29-38; 
1 Thess. 2:14-16); and these motifs are built into the very struc- 
ture of Revelation, the final Covenant Lawsuit. 

All this is further emphasized by St. John's use of the pro- 
phetic Lawsuit terminology: the accusation of harlotry. Through- 
out Scripture, Israel is regarded as God's Wife; the covenant is a 
marriage bond, and she is expected to be faithful to it. Her 
apostasv from God is called adultery, and she is identified as a 
harlot. There are numerous examples of this in the prophets: 

How the faithful city has become a harlot, 
She who was full of justice! 
Righteousness once lodged in her, 
But now murderers. (Isa. 1:21) 

For long ago I broke your yoke 

And tore off your bonds; 

But you said: I will not serve! 

For on every high hill 

And under every green tree 

You have lain down as a harlot. (Jer.2:20) 

Your fame went forth among the nations on account of your 
beauty, for it was perfect because of My splendor which I 
bestowed on you, declares the Lord God. But you trusted in 
your beauty and played the harlot because of your fame, and 
you poured out your harlotries on every passerby who might be 
willing. (Ezek. 16:14-15) 

Do not rejoice, Israel, with exultation like the nations! 
For you have played the harlot, forsaking your God. 
You have loved harlots' earnings on every threshing floor. 
(Hos. 9:1) 

19 



INTRODUCTION 

Throughout Scripture, it is Israel whom the prophets char- 
acteristically condemn as a harlot , 41 Accordingly, when St. John 
brings lawsuit against Israel for her rejection of Christ, the 
greatest apostasy of all time (cf. Matt. 21:33-45), he appropri- 
ately calls her "the Great Harlot . . . the Mother of the harlots 
and of the abominations of the Land" (Rev. 17:1,5). 

There are other indications within the structure of Revela- 
tion that it is a Covenant Lawsuit against Israel. The four seven- 
fold judgments are arranged in general conformity to the order 
of Jesus' prophecy against Jerusalem in Matthew 24. 42 Thus the 
Seven Letters (Rev. 2-3) deal with false apostles, persecution, 
lawlessness, love grown cold, and the duty of perseverance (cf. 
Matt. 24:3-5, 9-13); the Seven Seals (Rev. 4-7) are concerned 
with wars, famines, and earthquakes (cf. Matt. 24:6-8); the 
Seven Trumpets (Rev. 8-14) tell of the Church's witness to the 
world, her flight into the wilderness, the Great Tribulation, and 
the False Prophet (cf. Matt. 24:14-27); and the Seven Chalices 
(Rev. 15-22) describe the darkening of the Beast's kingdom, the 
destruction of the Harlot, the gathering of eagles over Jeru- 
salem's corpse, and the gathering of the Church into the King- 
dom (cf. Matt. 24:28-31). 

Revelation, Ezekiel, and the Lectionary 

But there is at least one other factor that has greatly influ- 
enced the outline of the Revelation. It is constructed with strict 
adherence to one of the most famous Covenant Lawsuits of all 
time: the prophecy of Ezekiel. Revelation's dependence upon 
the language and imagery of Ezekiel has long been recognized; 43 
one scholar has found in Revelation no less than 130 separate 
references to Ezekiel. 44 But St. John does more than merely 



41. The figurative image of harlotry is consistently used for apostasy from 
the covenant. There are, in fact, only two cases in all of Scripture in which the 
term is applied to other nations. In both cases (Tyre, I sa. 23:15-17; and Nin- 
eveh, Nab. 3:4), they were nations that had been in covenant with God 
through Israel. 

42. See J . P. M. Sweet, Revelation (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 
1979), pp. 52-54. 

43. See, e.g., FerrellJ enkins, The Old Testament in the Book of Revelation 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book H ouse, [1972] 1976), pp. 54ff, 

44. Albert Vanhoye, "L 'utilisation du Livred'Ezechiel clan si' Apocalypse," 
Biblica43 (1962), pp. 436-76 (see esp. pp. 473-76). 

20 



REVELATION, EZEKI EL, AN D TH E LECTIONARY 

make literary allusions to Ezekiel. He follows him, step by step 
- so much so that Philip Barrington could say, with only mild 
hyperbole: 'The Revelation is a Christian rewriting of Ezekiel. 
Its fundamental structure is the same. Its interpretation depends 
upon Ezekiel. The first half of both books leads up to the de- 
struction of the earthly J erusalem; in the second they describe a 
new and holy J erusalem. There is one significant difference. 
Ezekiel's lament over Tyre is transformed into a lament over 
J erusalem, the reason being that St. J ohn wishes to transfer to 
J erusalem the note of irrevocable doom found in the lament 
over Tyre. Here lies the real difference in the messages of the two 
books. Jerusalem, like Tyre, is to go forever." 45 Consider the 
more obvious parallels: 46 

1. The Throne- Vision (Rev. 4/Ezek. 1) 

2. The Book (Rev. 5/Ezek. 2-3) 

3. The Few- Plagues (Rev. 6:l-8/Ezek,5) 

4. The Slain under the Altar (Rev. 6:9-ll/Ezek. 6) 

5. The Wrath of God (Rev. 6:12-17/Ezek. 7) 

6. The Seal on the Saint's Foreheads (Rev. 7/Ezek.9) 

7. The Coals from the Altar (Rev. 8/Ezek. 10) 

8. No More Delay (Rev. 10:1-7 /Ezek. 12) 

9. The Eating of the Book (Rev. 10:8-ll/Ezek.2) 

10. The Measuring of the Temple (Rev. ll:l-2/Ezek. 40-43) 

11. Jerusalem and Sodom (Rev. ll:8/Ezek, 16) 

12. The Cup of Wrath (Rev. 14/Ezek.23) 

13. The Vine of the Land (Rev. 14:18-20/Ezek. 15) 

14. The Great Harlot (Rev. 17-18 /Ezek. 16, 23) 

15. The Lament over the City (Rev. 1 8/Ezek. 27) 

16. The Scavengers' Feast (Rev. 19/Ezek. 39) 

17. The First Resurrection (Rev. 20:4-6/Ezek. 37) 

18. The Battle with Gog and Magog (Rev. 20:7-9/Ezek. 38-39) 

19. The New Jerusalem (Rev. 21/Ezek. 40-48) 

20. The River of Life (Rev. 22/Ezek. 47) 

As M. D. Goulder points out, the closeness of the two 
books' structure - the step-by-step "pegging" of Revelation with 



45. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), p. 65. 

46. This list is based on Barrington (p. 64) and on M.D. Goulder, 'The 
Apocalypse as an Annual Cycle of Prophecies," New Testament Studies 27, 
No.3 (April 1981), pp. 342-67. 

21 



INTRODUCTION 

Ezekiel-implies something more than a merely literary rela- 
tionship. "Level pegging is not usually a feature of literary bor- 
rowing: the Chronicler's work, for example, is far from pegging 
level with Samuel-Kings, with his massive expansion of the Tem- 
ple material, and his excision of the northern traditions. Level 
pegging is a feature rather of lectionary use, as when the Church 
sets (set) Genesis to be read alongside Remans, or Deuteronomy 
alongside Acts. . , . Furthermore, it is plain that John expected 
his prophecies to be read aloud in worship, for he says, 'Blessed 
is he who reads the words of the prophecy, and blessed are those 
who hear' (1:3) - RSV correctly glosses 'reads aloud.' Indeed, 
the very fact that he repeatedly calls his book 'the prophecy' 
aligns it with the OT prophecies, which were familiar from their 
public reading in worship."4 7 In other words, the Book of Reve- 
lation was intended from the beginning as a series of readings in 
worship throughout the Church Year, to be read in tandem with 
the prophecy of Ezekiel (as well as other Old Testament read- 
ings). As Austin Farrer wrote in his first study of Revelation, 
St. John "certainly did not think it was going to be read once to 
the congregations and then used to wrap up fish, like a pastoral 
letter." 48 

Goulder's thesis on Revelation is supported by the findings 
in his recent work on the Gospels, The Evangelists' Calendar, 
which has revolutionized New Testament studies by setting the 
Gospels in their proper liturgical context. 4 ' As Goulder shows, 
the Gospels were originally written, not as "books," but as serial 
readings in worship, to accompany the readings in the s yna- 
gogues (the first New Testament churches). In fact, he argues, 
"Luke developed his Gospel in preaching to his congregation, as 
a series of fulfillments of the .T.; and this development in litur- 
gical series explains the basic structure of his Gospel, which has 
been a riddle so long." 50 



47. M . D. Goulder, 'The Apocalypse as an Annual Cycle of Prophecies; 
p. 350. 

48. Austin Farrer,A Rebirth of Images: The Making of St. John's Apoca- 
lypse (Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, [1949] 1970), p. 22. 

49. M . D. Goulder, The Evangelists' Calendar: A Lectionary Explanation 
of the Development of Scripture (London: SPCK, 1978). 

50. Ibid., p. 7. Goulder suggests that the Book of Revelation was written in 
the same way, as St. J ohn's meditations on the lectionary readings in his 
church. 

22 



REVELATION, EZEKI EL, AN D TH E LECTIONARY 

The structures of both Ezekiel and Revelation lend them- 
selves readily to serialized lectionary usage, as Goulder ob- 
serves: "In the division of the Apocalypse and of Ezekiel into 
prophecies or visions, units for the successive Sundays, the in- 
terpreter has little discretion; a happy feature, since we are look- 
ing for clear, uncontroversial dividing lines. Most commentaries 
divide the Apocalypse into about fifty units, and they do not 
diverge greatly. Ezekiel is divided in the Bible into forty-eight 
chapters, many of which are self-evidently single prophecies 
standing on their own. Further, the length of Ezekiel' s chapters 
is on the whole level. The book covers a little over 53 pages of 
text in the RV, and many chapters are about two columns (a 
page) long. Some of the divisions are perhaps questionable. For 
example, Ezekiel' s call extends beyond the very brief ch. 2 to a 
clear end at 3:15, and the short ch. 9 could be taken with 8; 
whereas there are some enormous chapters, 16, 23, and 40, 
which are more than four columns in length, and which sub- 
divide naturally. But one encouraging feature will have become 
obvious to the reader already: both books divide into about fifty 
units, and the Jewish(-Christian) year consists of fifty or fifty- 
one sabbaths/Sundays. So we have what looks like material for 
an annual cycle of Ezekiel inspiring a year's cycle of visions, 
which could then be read in the Asian churches alongside Ezek- 
iel, and expounded in sermons in its light ." 51 Goulder goes onto 
provide a lengthy table showing consecutive readings through 
Ezekiel and Revelation, set out alongside the Christian year 
from Easter to Easter; the correlations are amazing. 52 

The Paschal (Easter) emphasis of Revelation was also 
brought out in a study by Massey Shepherd, almost twenty years 
before Goulder wrote. 53 Shepherd demonstrated another strik- 
ing aspect of the architecture of Revelation, showing that St. 
John's prophecy is laid out according to the structure of the 



57. M. D. Goulder, 'The Apocalypse as an Annual Cycle of Prophecies," 
pp. 350f. 

52. Ibid., pp. 353-54. J amesB.J ordan has written a very helpful series of 
studies on "Christianity and the Calendar," published over a three-year period 
in 77zeGeneva Papers (first series), availablefrom Geneva Ministries, P. O. 
Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. See esp. No. 27 (J anuary 1984): "Is the Church 
Year Desirable?" 

53. Massey H . Shepherd J r., The Paschal Liturgy and the Apocalypse 
(Richmond: J ohn Knox Press, 1960). 

23 



INTRODUCTION 

early Church's worship - in fact, that both his Gospel and the 
Revelation "give their testimony from the vantage point of ex- 
perience of the Paschal liturgy of the Asian churches." 54 

The lectionary nature of Revelation helps explain the wealth 
of liturgical material in the prophecy. Revelation is not, of 
course, a manual about how to "do" a worship service; rather, it 
is a worship service, a liturgy conducted in heaven as a model 
for those on earth (and incidentally instructing us that the Throne- 
room of God is the only proper vantage point for viewing the 
earthly conflict between the Seed of the Woman and the seed of 
the Serpent): "The worship of the Church has traditionally, 
quite consciously, been patterned after the divine and eternal 
realities revealed in [Revelation]. The prayer of the Church and 
its mystical celebration are one with the prayer and celebration 
of the kingdom of heaven. Thus, in Church, with the angels and 
saints, through Christ the Word and the Lamb, inspired by the 
Holy Spirit, the faithful believers of the assembly of the saved 
offer perpetual adoration to God the Father Almighty." 55 

The failure to recognize the significance of Revelation for 
Christian worship has greatly impoverished many modern 
churches. To take only one example: How many sermons have 
been preached on Revelation 3:20 - "Behold, I stand at the door 
and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will 
come in to him, and will dine with him, and he with Me" - with- 
out recognizing the very obvious sacramental reference? Of 
course Jesus is speaking about the Lord's Supper, inviting us to 
dine with Him; why didn't we see it before? The reason has 
much to do with a puritanical notion of worship that comes, not 
from the Bible, but from pagan philosophers. 

Dom Gregory Dix, in his massive study of Christian wor- 
ship, hit it right on the head: Liturgical puritanism is not "Prot- 
estant"; it is not even Christian. It is, instead, "a general theory 
about worship, not specifically protestant nor indeed confined 
to Christians of any kind. It is the working theory upon which 
all Mohammedan worship is based. It was put as well as any- 



54. Ibid., p. 82. 

55. Thomas Hopko, The Orthodox Faith, Vol. 4: The Bible and Church 
History (Orthodox Church in America, 1973), pp. 64 f.; cited in George Cronk, 
The Message of the Bible: An Orthodox Christian Perspective (Crestwood, 
NY:St.Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1982), p. 259. 

24 



THE NATURE OF REVELATI ON : APOCALYPTI C? 

body by the Roman poet Persius or the pagan philosopher Sen- 
eca in the first century, and they are only elaborating a thesis 
from Greek philosophical authors going back to the seventh 
century B.C. Briefly, the puritan theory is that worship is a purely 
mental activity, to be exercised by a strictly psychological 'atten- 
tion' to a subjective emotional or spiritual experience. . . . Over 
against this puritan theory of worship stands another — the 'cere- 
monious' conception of worship, whose foundation principle is 
that worship as such is not a purely intellectual and affective ex- 
ercise, but one in which the whole man — body as well as soul, 
his aesthetic and volitional as well as his intellectual powers - 
must take full part. It regards worship as an 'act' just as much as 
an 'experience.' " 56 It is this "ceremonious" view of worship that 
is taught by the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation. Since all the 
action of Revelation is seen from the viewpoint of a worship ser- 
vice, this commentary will assume that the prophecy's liturgical 
structure is basic to its proper interpretation. 

The Nature of Revelation: Apocalyptic? 

The Book of Revelation is often treated as an example of the 
"apocalyptic" genre of writings which flourished among the 
Jews between 200 B.C. and a.d. 100. There is no basis for this 
opinion whatsoever, and it is unfortunate that the word apoca- 
lyptic is used at all to describe this literature. (The writers of 
"apocalyptic" themselves never used the term in this sense; 
rather, scholars have stolen the term from St. John, who called 
his book "The Apocalypse of Jesus Christ.") There are, in fact, 
many major differences between the "apocalyptic" writings and 
the Book of Revelation. 

The "apocalyptists" expressed themselves in unexplained and 
unintelligible symbols, and generally had no intention of mak- 
ing themselves really understood. Their writings abound in pes- 
simism: no real progress is possible, nor will there be any victory 
for God and His people in history. We cannot even see God act- 
ing in history. All we know is that the world is getting worse and 
worse. The best we can do is hope for the End — soon. 57 Ferrell 



56. Dom Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (New York: The Seabury 
Press, [1945] 1983), p. 312. 

57. See Leon Morris, Apocalyptic (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans 
Publishing Co., 1972). 

25 



INTRODUCTION 

Jenkins writes: "To them the forces of evil apparently had con- 
trol in the present age and God would act only in the End 
Time." 58 (This should have a familiar ring.) Feeling impotent in 
the face of inexorable evil, the apocalyptist "could accordingly 
indulge in the wildest speculation. ... he had written off this 
world and its activities, so there was no question of his trying 
seriously to provide workable solutions to its problems." 59 The 
practical result was that the apocalyptists rarely concerned 
themselves with ethical behavior: "In the last resort their interest 
is in eschatology, not ethics." 60 

St. John's approach in the Revelation is vastly different. His 
symbols are not obscure ravings hatched from a fevered imagi- 
nation; they are rooted firmly in the Old Testament (and the rea- 
son for their seeming obscurity is that very fact: We have trouble 
understanding them only because we don't know our Bibles). In 
contrast to the apocalyptists, who had given up on history, 
"John presents history as the scene of divine redemption." 61 
Leon Morris describes St. John's worldview: "For him history is 
the sphere in which God has wrought out redemption. The 
really critical thing in the history of mankind has already taken 
place, and it took place here, on this earth, in the affairs of men. 
The Lamb 'as it had been slain' dominates the entire book. John 
sees Christ as victorious and as having won the victory through 
His death, an event in history. His people share in His triumph, 
but they have conquered Satan 'by the blood of the Lamb and 
by the word of their testimony' (Rev. 12:11). The pessimism 
which defers God's saving activity until the End is absent. 
Though John depicts evil realistically, his book is fundamentally 
optimistic." 62 

The apocalyptists said: The world is coming to an end: Give 
up! The Biblical prophets said: The world is coming to a begin- 
ning: Get to work! 

Thus, the Book of Revelation is not an apocalyptic tract; it 



58. FerrellJ enkins, The Old Testament in the Book of Revelation (Grand 
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1976), p. 41. J enkins' book is an excellent brief in- 
troduction to the Biblical background and symbolism of the Revelation. 

59. Morris, p. 71. 

60. Ibid., p. 60. 

61. J enkins, p. 41. 

62. Morris, p. 79. 

26 



THE SYMBOLISM OF REVELATION 

is, instead, as St. John himself reminds us repeatedly, a proph- 
ecy (1:3; 10:11; 22:7, 10, 18-19), completely in keeping with the 
writings of the other Biblical prophets. And - again in stark 
contrast to the apocalyptists — if there was one major concern 
among the Biblical prophets, it was ethical conduct. No Biblical 
writer ever revealed the future merely for the sake of satisfying 
curiosity: The goal was always to direct God's people toward 
right action in the present. The overwhelming majority of Bibli- 
cal prophecy had nothing to do with the common misconception 
of "prophecy" as foretelling the future. The prophets told of the 
future only in order to stimulate godly living. As Benjamin War- 
field wrote: "We must try to keep fresh in our minds the great 
principle that all prophecy is ethical in its purpose, and that this 
ethical end controls not only what shall be revealed in general, 
but also the details of it, and the very form which it takes." 63 
The fact that many who study the prophetic writings today 
are interested in finding possible references to space travel and 
nuclear weapons, rather than in discovering God's command- 
ments for living, is a sickening tribute to a shallow and imma- 
ture faith. "The testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy" 
(Rev. 19:10); to ignore Jesus in favor of atomic blasts is a perver- 
sion of Scripture, a blasphemous twisting of God's holy Word. 
From beginning to end, St. John is intensely interested in the 
ethical conduct of his readers: 

Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of the 
prophecy, and keep the things that are written in it. (1:3) 

Blessed is he who stays awake and keeps his garments. (16:15) 

Blessed is he who keeps the words of the prophecy of this 
book. (22:7) 

Blessed are those who do His commandments. (22:14) 

The Symbolism of Revelation 
Prophecy has often been called "history written in advance." 64 



63. Benjamin B. Warfield, 'The Prophecies of St. Paul, "in Biblicaland 
Theological Studies (Philadelphia: The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing 
Co., 1968), p. 470. 

64. One of the greatest popularizers of this view was the rationalistic Chris- 
tian apologist J oseph Butler, who claimed that "prophecy is nothing but the 
history of events before they come to pass." The Analogy of Religion, Natural 

27 



INTRODUCTION 

As we have already seen, however, prophecy is primarily a mes- 
sage from God's emissaries within the framework of the Cove- 
nant, addressed in terms of the stipulations and sanctions set 
forth in Biblical law. It is not simply "prediction." Certainly, the 
prophets did predict future events in history, but not in the form 
of historical writing. Instead, the prophets used symbols and fig- 
ures borrowed from history, from the surrounding culture, and 
from creation. Most errors in interpreting the prophets stem 
from the neglect of this principle. I once heard a pastor deliver a 
very earnest and thrilling lecture on space stations and inter- 
planetary voyages, using Revelation 21:10 as his text. Only in the 
modern age of space travel, he observed, could the prophecy of 
the New Jerusalem be fulfilled. It was, on the whole, a very en- 
joyable speech, and a marvelous demonstration of the pastor's 
wealth of learning in the field of science fiction; but the en- 
chanted audience left the meeting at least as ignorant of Scrip- 
ture as they had been when it began. 

The Bible is literature: It is divinely-inspired and inerrant lit- 
erature, but it is literature all the same. This means that we must 
read it as literature. Some parts are meant to be literally under- 
stood, and they are written accordingly - as history, or theologi- 
cal propositions, or whatever. But one would not expect to read 
the Psalms or the Song of Solomon by the same literary stan- 
dards used for the Book of Remans. It would be like reading 
Hamlet's soliloquy "literally": "The slings and arrows of outrag- 
eous fortune ... to take arms against a sea of troubles. ..." 
We cannot understand what the Bible really (literally) means un- 
less we appreciate its use of literary styles. Would we understand 
the Twenty-third Psalm properly if we were to take it "literally"? 
Would it not, instead, look somewhat silly? In fact, if taken lit- 
erally, it would not be true: for I daresay that the Lord doesn't 
make every Christian to lie down in literal, green pastures. But 
we don't usually make such crude mistakes in reading Biblical 
poetry. We know it is written in a style that often makes use of 
symbolic imagery. But we must realize that the same is true of 
the prophets: They, also, spoke in figures and symbols, drawing 
on a rich heritage of Biblical images that began in the Garden of 

and Revealed, to the Constitution and Course of Nature (Oxford: At the Uni- 
versity Press, [1736] 1835), p. 310. 

28 



THE SYMBOLISM OF REVELATION 

Eden. 65 

Indeed, Paradise is where prophecy began. It is worth noting 
that the very first promise of the coming Redeemer was stated in 
highly symbolic terms. God said to the Serpent: 

I will put enmity 

Between you and the woman 

And between your seed and her Seed; 

He shall crush your head, 

And you shall strike His heel. (Gen. 3:15) 

Obviously, this is not simply "history written in advance." It 
is a symbolic statement, very much of a piece with the evocative, 
poetic language used throughout the Bible, and especially in 
Revelation. In fact, St. John plainly tells us in his opening sen- 
tence that the Revelation is written in signs, in symbols. He did 
not intend it to be read like a newspaper or a stock market anal- 
ysis. He expected his audience to respond to his prophecy in 
terms of the Bible's own system of symbolism. 

I repeat: the Bible's own system of symbolism. The meaning 
of a symbol is not whatever we choose to make it; nor did St. 
John create the images of the Book of Revelation out of his own 
imagination. He presents Christ to his readers as a Lion and a 
Lamb, not because he thinks those are pretty pictures, but be- 
cause of the connotations of lions and lambs already established 
in the Bible. The Book of Revelation thus tells us from the out- 
set that its standard of interpretation is the Bible itself. The 
book is crammed with allusions to the Old Testament. Merrill 
Tenney says: "It is filled with references to events and characters 
of the Old Testament, and a great deal of its phraseology is 
taken directly from the Old Testament books. Oddly enough, 
there is not one direct citation in Revelation from the Old Testa- 
ment with a statement that it is quoted from a given passage; but 
a count of the significant allusions which are traceable both by 
verbal resemblance and by contextual connection to the Hebrew 
canon number three hundred and forty-eight. Of these approx- 
imately ninety-five are repeated, so that the actual number of 
different Old Testament passages that are mentioned are nearly 



65. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 15-63. 

29 



INTRODUCTION 

two hundred and fifty, or an average of more than ten for each 
chapter in Revelation ," 66 Tenney's count of 348 clear Old Testa- 
ment references breaks down as follows: 57 from the Penta- 
teuch, 235 from the Prophets, and 56 more from the historical 
and poetical books. 67 

Tenney admits that his figures are conservative; one might 
even say hidebound. Nevertheless, even using his figures, it is 
obvious that the Book of Revelation depends on the Old Testa- 
ment much more than does any other New Testament book. 
This fact alone should warn us that we cannot begin to fathom 
its meaning apart from a solid grasp of the Bible as a whole. The 
early churches had such an understanding. The Gospel had been 
preached first to the Jews and Gentile proselytes; often churches 
had been formed by worshipers at synagogues, and this was true 
even of the churches of Asia Minor (Acts 2:9; 13:14; 14:1; 16:4; 
17:1-4, 10-12, 17; 18:4, 8, 19, 24-28; 19:1-10, 17). Moreover, it is 
clear from Galatians2:9 that the Apostle John's ministry was to 
Jews in particular. Therefore, the first readers of the Revelation 
were steeped in the Old Testament to a degree that most of us to- 
day are not. The symbolism of the Revelation is saturated with 
Biblical allusions which were commonly understood by the early 
Church. Even in those rare congregations that did not have 
some Hebrew members, the Scriptures used in teaching and 
worship were primarily from the Old Testament. The early 
Christians possessed the authoritative and infallible key to the 
meaning of St. John's prophecies. Our modern failure to appre- 
ciate this crucial fact is the main cause of our inability to under- 
stand what he was talking about. 

For instance, let's take a much-abused symbol from Revela- 
tion and apply this principle. In Rev. 7, 9, 14 and 22, St. John 
sees God's people sealed on their foreheads with His name; and 
in Rev. 13 he writes of the worshipers of the Beast, who are des- 
ignated on their right hands and foreheads with his mark. Many 
fanciful interpretations have been made regarding these marks 
— ranging from tattoos and amusement-park validations to 
credit cards and Social Security numbers - and all without the 



66. Merrill C. Tenney, Interpreting Revelation (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1957), p. 101. 

67. Ibid, p. 104. 

30 



THE PRIMACY OF SYMBOLISM 

slightest notice of the clear Biblical allusions. But what would 
the first readers of these passages have thought? The symbols 
would have made them think immediately of several Biblical 
references: the "mark" of sweat on Adam's forehead, signifying 
God's Curse on his disobedience (Gen. 3 :19); the forehead of the 
High Priest, marked with gold letters proclaiming that he was 
now HOLY TO THE LORD (Ex. 28:36); Deuteronomy 6:6-8 
and Ezekiel 9:4-6, in which the servants of God are "marked" on 
the hand and forehead with the law of God, and thus receive 
blessing and protection in His name. The followers of the Beast, 
on the other hand, receive his mark of ownership: submission to 
ungodly, statist, antichristian law. The mark in Revelation is not 
meant to be taken literally. It is an allusion to an Old Testament 
symbol that spoke of a man's total obedience to God, and it stands 
as a warning that our god - whether it be the true God or the self- 
deified State - demands complete obedience to his lordship. 

That will be the principle of interpretation followed in this 
commentary. The Revelation is a revelation: It was meant to be 
understood. Benjamin Warfield wrote: "John's Apocalypse need 
not be other than easy: all its symbols are either obvious natural 
ones, or else have their roots planted in the Old Testament poets 
and prophets and the figurative language of Jesus and his apos- 
tles. No one who knows his Bible need despair of reading this 
book with profit. Above all, he who can understand our Lord's 
great discourse concerning the last things (Matt. 24), cannot fail 
to understand the Apocalypse, which is founded on that dis- 
course and scarcely advances beyond it." 68 

The Primacy of Symbolism 

How important is symbolism in the Bible? The great Dutch 
theologian Herman Bavinck deals with the subject extensively in 
his book The Doctrine of God. 69 Speaking of the Bible's "sym- 
bolic" names for God, he says: "Scripture does not merely con- 
tain a few anthropomorphisms; on the contrary, all Scripture is 
anthropomorphic. . . . Hence, all the names with which God 



68. Benjamin B. Warfield, 'The Apocalypse? in Selected Shorter Writings 
of Benjamin B. Warfield (Nutley, NJ : Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing 
Co., 1973), vol.11, pp. 652f. 

69. Herman Bavinck, The Doctrine of God, William Hendriksen, trans. 
(Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, [1951] 1977). 

31 



INTRODUCTION 

names himself and by means of which he allows us to address 
him are derived from earthly and human relations." 70 "In order 
to give us an idea of the majesty and exalted character of God 
names are derived from every kind of creature, living and life- 
less, organic and inorganic." 71 In fact, "it is altogether impossi- 
ble to say anything about God apart from the use of anthropo- 
morphisms. We do not see God as he is in himself. We behold 
him in his works. We name him according to the manner in 
which he has revealed himself in his works. To see God face to 
face is for us impossible, at least hereon earth. . . . Whosoever, 
therefore, objects to anthropomorphisms, thereby in principle 
denies the possibility of a revelation of God in his creatures." 72 
"For man there are only two alternatives: absolute silence with 
reference to God, or speaking about him in a human way; either 
agnosticism, i.e., theoretical atheism, or anthropomorphism." 73 

Symbolism is thus inescapable: "Therefore, though we call 
God by names derived from the creature, God himself first es- 
tablished these names for the creature. Indeed, although we first 
apply to the creature the names which designate God because of 
the fact that we know the creature before we know God; essen- 
tially they apply first of all to God, then to the creature. All vir- 
tues pertain first to God, then to the creature: God possesses 
these virtues 'in essence,' the creature 'through participation.' As 
the temple was made 'according to the pattern shown to Moses 
in the mount,' Heb. 8:5, even so every creature was first con- 
ceived and afterward (in time) created. 'Every fatherhood' is 
named from 'the Father' who created all things - Eph. 3:15; cf. 
Matt. 23 :9." 74 

Bavinck is making two very significant points: First, all crea- 
tion is primarily symbolic. All creatures reflect the glory of God, 
and are images of some aspect or other of His nature. God's per- 
sonality is imprinted on everything He has made. The central 
value of anything is that it is a symbol of God. All other values 
and relationships are secondary. And, since man is God's 
primary symbol, being His very "image" (both individually and 



70. 


Ibid. 


. p. 86 


71. 


Ibid., 


, p. 88. 


72. 


Ibid., 


p. 91. 


73. 


Ibid., 


, p. 92. 


74. 


Ibid., 


, p. 94. 



32 



THE PRIMACY OF SYMBOLISM 

corporately), everything is symbolic of man as well; thus every- 
thing reveals God and man. 75 

Second, symbolism is analogical, not realistic. In this the im- 
agery used in the Bible contrasts markedly with the imagery of 
paganism. For example, the Bible speaks of the marriage cove- 
nant as analogous to the covenant between God and His people 
(2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5:22-33; Rev. 19:7-9; 21:9-11). The Church has 
always seen the Song of Solomon as, in part, an analogy of her 
own romance with the heavenly Bridegroom. But this is far 
from implying that sex is a sacrament; nor is this a doctrine of 
salvation through marriage. The symbolism is analogical, not 
metaphysical. We do not have a sexual relationship with God. 
There is a one-and-many complex of images involved in the Bib- 
lical picture. The theology of the Bible is analogical, not realis- 
tic. In Biblical salvation, man becomes remade in the image of 
God by a judicial sentence and an ethical transformation - not 
by a metaphysical participation in the divine essence. 76 

This means that Biblical symbolism is not a "code." It is not 
given in a flat "this-means-that" style: "Biblical symbols are 
fluid, not stereotyped."7 7 A Biblical symbol is a collectivity, re- 
ferring to several ideas at once. Biblical symbolism, like poetry, 
is evocative language, used when discursive, specific language is 
insufficient. The Bible uses evocative imagery to call up to our 
minds various associations which have been established by the 
Bible's own literary art. 



75. For an extended discussion of the primary significance of symbolism, 
see J ames B. J ordan, "Symbolism: A Manifesto," in The Sociology of the 
Church (Tyler, TX: Geneva M inistries, 1986). 

76. Thus, we should not be frightened when we find the Bible using certain 
symbols that are also used in pagan religions - for example, the Biblical refer- 
ences to stars or to the constellations of the Zodiac. (By the way, "Zodiac" is 
not an occult word; it simply refers to the apparent path of the sun across the 
heavens, passing 'through" the twelve major constellations, the way God in- 
tended that it should.) Some forms of paganism teach that water is inhabited 
by spirits, and that (with the proper incantations) its application can confer 
magical powers. Christians do not believe this. Should we therefore (in order 
not to be confused with pagans) abandon the use of baptism? Or, should we 
give up the doctrine of the Virgin Birth, on the grounds that mythological gods 
have impregnated earthly maidens? Such examples can be multiplied many 
times over. Paganism, being a perversion of the truth, has a myriad of doc- 
trines which bear a certain superficial similarity to Christianity. This does not 
mean that we should be afraid of symbolism; it means, instead, that we should 
reclaim the stolen symbols for the Lord J esus Christ. 

77. RousasJ . Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come, p. 174. 

33 



INTRODUCTION 

Austin Farrer pointed out a distinction we must always keep 
in mind - the difference between sense and referent. While the 
sense of a symbol remains the same (the words "white house" 
always mean "white house"), it can have numerous referents 
(The White House in Washington, D. C; the white house across 
the street; the green house that belongs to Fred White; etc.). "St. 
John's images do not mean anything you like; their sense can be 
determined. But they still have an astonishing multiplicity of 
reference. Otherwise, why write in images rather than in cold 
factual prose? It has been said that the purpose of scientific 
statement is the elimination of ambiguity, and the purpose of 
symbol the inclusion of it. We write in symbol when we wish our 
words to present, rather than analyze or prove, their subject- 
matter. (Not every subject-matter; some can be more directly 
presented without symbol.) Symbol endeavors, as it were, to 
be that of which it speaks, and imitates reality by the multipli- 
city of its significance. Exact statement isolates a single aspect of 
fact: a theologian, for example, endeavors to isolate the rela- 
tion in which the atoning death of Christ stands to the idea of 
forensic justice. But we who believe that the atoning death took 
place, must see in it a fact related to everything human or 
divine, with as many significance as there are things to which it 
can be variously related. The mere physical appearance of that 
death, to one who stood by then, would by no means express 
what the Christian thinks it, in itself, to be; it took many years 
for the Cross to gather round itself the force of a symbol in its 
own right. St. John writes 'a Lamb standing as slaughtered' and 
significance of indefinite scope and variety awake in the scripture- 
reading mind. There is a current and exceedingly stupid doctrine 
that symbol evokes emotion, and exact prose states reality. 
Nothing could be further from the truth: exact prose abstracts 
from reality, symbol presents it. And for that very reason, sym- 
bols have some of the many-sidedness of wild nature." 78 



78. Austin Farrer,A Rebirth of Images, pp. 19f. For those readers who truly 
wish to pursue the serious study of Scripture, I suggest the following as an ab- 
solutely necessary first step: Pack all your books on hermeneutics i n a trunk 
until you have read Laurence Perrine, Sound and Sense: An Introduction to 
Poetry (New York: Harcourt B race Jovanovich, sixth ed., 1982), and J ohn 
Ciardiand Miller Williams, How Does a Poem Mean (Boston: Houghton 
Mifflin Co., second cd., 1975). More courageous souls may wish to continue 
further with two books by Northrop Frye: Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton: 
Princeton University Press, 1957) and (with caution) The Great Code: The 
Bible and Literature (New York: Harcourt B race Jovanovich, 1982). 

34 



THE PRIMACY OF SYMBOLISM 

For example, the symbolic number 666 (Rev. 13:18) clearly 
refers to Nero Caesar; but if St. John had merely intended that 
his readers should understand "Nero Caesar," he would have 
written "Nero Caesar," not "666. "7 9 He used the number 666 be- 
cause of an already established system of Biblical imagery that 
allowed him to say a great many things about Nero simply by 
using that number. As Philip Barrington says: "Many people 'in- 
terpret' the Revelation ... as if each detail of each vision had a 
definable meaning which could be explained in so many words. 
These commentators are rationalizers, deficient in the mystical 
sense. Symbolism is a way of suggesting the truth about those 
great spiritual realities which exclude exact definition or com- 
plete systematization; that is why it is so much employed in wor- 
ship. . . . The symbol is much richer in meaning than any 
meaning we can draw from it. The same is true of the parables 
and symbolic teaching of Jesus. The same is true of the sacra- 
ments and symbolic acts of the church, or even of society. Many 
logical systems can be made up to explain the 'meaning' of shak- 
ing hands or making the sign of the cross; but because of their 
simplicity and universality these actions mean more than words 
can explain." 80 

Further, "the prophets in general use a great deal of hyper- 
bole and picturesque exaggeration in the manner of Oriental 
poetry. As the days of a tree shall be the days of my people (Isa. 
65:22). Yet destroyed I the Amorite whose height was like the 
height of the cedars (Amos 2:9): statements which mean respec- 
tively 'very old' and 'very tall.' It goes right back to primitive 
poetry: The mountains skipped like rams. . . . The earth trem- 
bled and shook (Ps. 114). Poets, even Western poets, will always 
continue to use it. It includes the use of huge figures; a reign of 
forty years means a good long reign, and a kingdom of a thou- 
sand years means a good long kingdom. The poetry of Jesus has 
it to a superlative degree; camels are swallowed or passed 



79. The idea that he wrote it in "code" because he was afraid of being ar- 
rested for treason is obviously false: The prophets were not timid men; and 
anyway, the Book of Revelation is 'treasonous" long before St. J ohn gets 
around to talking about Nero. Christians could be killed for saying simply 

what St. J ohn says in Chapter 1- that J esus Christ is 'the Ruler of the kings of 
the earth." 

80. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation, pp. 84f. 

35 



INTRODUCTION 

through needles' eyes; mountains are thrown into the depths of 
the sea; a man gets a tree-trunk stuck in his eye. 

"People without sufficient imagination to understand this 
and to enjoy it ought to steer clear of the Apocalypse. Just as a 
witness has to understand 'the nature of an oath,' so a commen- 
tator ought to understand the nature of a poem, or even of a 
joke. Many who are deficient in a sense of poetry and a sense of 
humor have tried their hands on the Apocalypse, and made a 
mess of it." 81 

Interpretive Maximalism 

James Jordan once observed that most conservative evangel- 
icals unintentionally pursue a "liberal" approach toward Scrip- 
ture in their sermons and commentaries. Liberals have held for 
years that the Bible is not revelation itself; rather, they maintain, 
it is a [flawed] record of revelation. W bile conservative evangeli- 
cals profess to believe that the Bible itself is revelation (and as 
such is inspired, authoritative, and inerrant), their expository 
methods deny this. In practice, conservatives themselves often 
treat the Bible as only a "record" of revelation. Evangelical com- 
mentaries tend not to deal with the actual text of the Bible, 
treating only of the events related in the text and paying scant 
attention to the wording and literary architecture of God's reve- 
lation. (Ironically, since liberals don't believe the events really 
happened, they sometimes tend to pay closer attention to the 
text itself. That's all they've got left.) 

The mark of a good Bible teacher is that he is constantly ask- 
ing: Why is the story told in this particular way? Why is this par- 
ticular word or phrase repeated several times? (How many 
times?) What does this story have in common with other 
stories? How is it different? Why does the text draw our atten- 
tion to seemingly unimportant details? How do the minor inci- 
dents fit into the argument of the book as a whole? What liter- 
ary devices (metaphor, satire, drama, comedy, allegory, poetry, 
etc.) does the author use? Why does the book sometimes depart 
from a strict chronological account (e.g., placing some stories 
"out of order")? How are these stories related to the larger Story 
that the Bible tells? What does this story tell us about Jesus 



81. Ibid., pp. I36f. 

36 



INTERPRETIVE MAXIMALISM 

Christ? What does this story have to do with our salvation? 
Why did God bother to give us this particular information? 

In his inaugural address as Professor of Biblical Theology in 
Princeton Theological Seminary in 1894, Geerhardus Vos spoke 
of the advantages of the Biblical-Theology approach to the 
study of Scripture; among these, he said, is "the new life and 
freshness which it gives to the old truth, showing it in all its his- 
toric vividness and reality with the dew of the morning of revela- 
tion upon its opening leaves. It is certainly not without signifi- 
cance that God has embodied the contents of revelation, not in 
a dogmatic system, but in a book of history, the parallel to 
which in dramatic interest and simple eloquence is nowhere to 
be found. It is this that makes the Scriptures speak and appeal 
to and touch the hearts and lead the minds of men captive to the 
truth everywhere. No one will be able to handle the Word of 
God more effectually than he to whom the treasure-chambers of 
its historic meaning have been opened Up."*2 

One of the most important discoveries that can be made by 
any Bible teacher is an understanding of the basic imagery laid 
down in the early chapters of Genesis - light and darkness, 
water and land, sky and clouds, mountains and gardens, beasts 
and dragons, gold and jewels, trees and thorns, cherubs and 
flaming swords - all of which form a grand and glorious Story, 
the true "fairy tale," one which can be grasped and delighted in 
even by very young children. 83 Everything in Scripture is "sym- 
bolic." Jordan calls this "interpretive maximalism," an approach 
that harmonizes with the interpretive method used by the 
Church Fathers, as opposed to the "minimalism" that has char- 
acterized fundamentalist-evangelical commentaries since the 
rise of rationalism. 84 

A good example of this is Jordan's discussion of Judges 9:53: 
"But a certain woman threw an upper millstone on Abimelech's 



82. Geerhardus Vos, 'Theldea of Biblical Theology,"in Richard B. Gaffin, 
ed., Redemptive History and Biblical Interpretation: The Shorter Writings of 
GeerhardusVos (Presbyterian and Reformed, 1980), p. 23. 

83. A good introduction to the literary motifs of Scripture is Leland 
Ryken's How to Read the Bible as Literature (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 
1984). 

84. J ames B.J ordan, Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, TX: 
Geneva Ministries, 1985), p. xii. 

37 



INTRODUCTION 

head, crushing his skull. " (Note: The text does not simply say 
that "Abimelech got killed." The details are there for a reason.) 
It is important, for symbolic reasons, that a woman crushed the 
tyrant's head (see, e.g., Gen. 3:15; cf. Jud. 5:24-27); that he was 
destroyed by a stone (cf. Deut. 13:10; Jud. 9:5; 1 Sam. 17:49; 
Dan. 2:34; Matt. 21:44); and that it was a roil/stone, an imple- 
ment of work to overcome tyranny (cf. Zech. 1 :18-21). 85 

But are there any controls on the "maximalist"? How does 
he evade the accusation that he is merely being speculative, in- 
terpreting the text according to his personal prejudice or the 
whim of the moment? Of course, the charge that an interpreter 
is being "speculative" can be, as often as not, little more than a 
smokescreen to disguise the accuser's ignorance of what the in- 
terpreter is talking about. The appropriate question, therefore, 
is whether or not the interpreter is proceeding in his investiga- 
tions along Biblical lines of thought. Does this mean that he 
must stick to the so-called "plain sense" of the text? It might be 
answered that one man's "plain sense" is another man's "specu- 
lation." A hyper-literalist would object to any level of symbol- 
ism at all. (For example, one popular preacher actually does 
teach, on the basis of the "plain sense" of Revelation 12, that 
there is a real, live, fire-breathing, seven-headed dragon flying 
around in outer space!) The more usual, run-of-the-mill literal- 
ist rejects all symbolism not explicitly explained as such in Scrip- 
ture. But neither of these positions is countenanced by the 
Bible. God has given us principles of interpreting His Word, and 
He expects us to use them. Our goal in Bible teaching is, to put 
it plainly, Bible teaching, according to the Bible's own standards 
of exegesis - whether or not those fit everyone's notions of 
"plainness." 

There are at least two things that can keep an interpreter on 
a Biblical track, avoiding the pitfalls of willy-nilly speculation. 
First, he must be faithful to the system of doctrine taught in the 
Bible. Reading the Bible with theological eyes, in terms of syste- 
matic and historical theology, is an effective check on unbridled 
speculation. Second, the interpreter must keep in mind that the 
symbols in the Bible are not isolated; rather, they are part of a 
system of symbolism given in the Bible, an architecture of im- 



85. Ibid., pp. 175f. 

38 



THE CONTEMPORARY FOCUS OF REVELATION 

ages in which all the parts fit together. If we honestly and care- 
fully read the Bible theologically and with respect to the Bible's 
own literary structure, we will not go very far astray. 86 

The Contemporary Focus of Revelation 

The purpose of the Revelation was to reveal Christ as Lord 
to a suffering Church. Because they were being persecuted, the 
early Christians could be tempted to fear that the world was get- 
ting out of hand - that Jesus, who had claimed "all authority 
... in heaven and on earth" (Matt. 28:18), was not really in 
control at ail. The apostles often warned against this man- 
centered error, reminding the people that God's sovereignty is 
over all of history (including our particular tribulations). This 
was the basis for some of the most beautiful passages of com- 
fort in the New Testament (e.g. Rem. 8:28-39; 2 Cor. 1:3-7; 
4:7-15). 

St. John's primary concern in writing the Book of Revelation 
was just this very thing: to strengthen the Christian community in 
the faith of Jesus Christ's Lordship, to make them aware that 
the persecutions they suffered were integrally involved in the 
great war of history. The Lord of glory had ascended to His 
throne, and the ungodly rulers were now resisting His authority 
by persecuting His brethren. The suffering of Christians was not 
a sign that Jesus had abandoned this world to the devil; rather, it 
revealed that He was King. If Jesus' Lordship were historically 
meaningless, the ungodly would have had no reason whatsoever 
to trouble the Christians. But instead, they persecuted Jesus' 
followers, showing their unwilling recognition of His supremacy 
over their rule. The Book of Revelation presents Jesus seated on 
a white horse as "King of kings and Lord of lords" (19:16), doing 
battle with the nations, judging and making war in righteous- 



86. For more on Biblical interpretation, see GeerhardusVos, Biblical 
Theology: Old and New Testaments (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1948); Mere- 
dith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980); 
Vern S. Poythress ; The Stained-Glass Kaleidoscope: Using Perspectives in 
Theology (privately printed syllabus, Westminster Theological Seminary, Phil- 
adelphia, 1985); Richard L. Pratt, J r., "Pictures, Windows, and Mirrors in Old 
Testament Exegesis," Westminster Theological Journal 45 (1983), pp. 156-67. 
J ames B.J ordan's three lectures on "How to I nterpret Prophecy" are an excel- 
lent introduction to the understanding of Biblical symbolism. The three tapes 
are available from Geneva Ministries, P. 0. Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. 

39 



INTRODUCTION 

ness. The persecuted Christians were not at all forsaken by God. 
In reality they were on the front lines of the conflict of the ages, 
a conflict in which Jesus Christ had already won the decisive bat- 
tle. Since His resurrection, all of history has been a "mopping 
up" operation, wherein the implications of His work are gradu- 
ally being implemented throughout the world. St. John is realis- 
tic: The battles will not be easy, nor will Christians emerge un- 
scathed. The war will often be bloody, and much of the blood 
will be our own. But Jesus is King, Jesus is Lord, and (as Luther 
says) "He must win the battle." The Son of God goes forth to 
war, conquering and to conquer, until He has put all enemies 
under His feet. 

The subject of the Revelation thus was contemporary; that 
is, it was written to and for Christians who were living at the 
time it was first delivered. We are wrong to interpret it futuristic- 
ally, as if its message were primarily intended for a time 2000 
years after St. John wrote it. (It is interesting - but not surpris- 
ing — that those who interpret the book "futuristically" always 
seem to focus on their own era as the subject of the prophecies. 
Convinced of their own importance, they are unable to think of 
themselves as living at any other time than the climax of 
history.) Of course, the events St. John foretold were "in the 
future" to St. John and his readers; but they occurred soon after 
he wrote of them. To interpret the book otherwise is to contra- 
dict both the scope of the work as a whole, and the particular 
passages which indicate its subject. For us, the great majority of 
the Revelation is history: It has already happened. 

The greatest enemy of the early Church was apostate Israel, 
which used the power of the pagan Roman Empire to try to 
stamp out Christianity, just as it had used Rome in the crucifix- 
ion of the Lord Himself. St. John's message in Revelation was 
that this great obstacle to the Church's victory over the world 
would soon be judged and destroyed. His message was contem- 
porary, not futuristic. 

Some will complain that this interpretation makes the Reve- 
lation "irrelevant" for our age. A more wrong-headed idea is 
scarcely imaginable. Are the books of Remans and Ephesians 
"irrelevant" just because they were written to believers in the 
first century? Should 1 Corinthians and Galatians be dismissed 
because they dealt with first-century problems? Is not all Scrip- 

40 



THE CONTEMPORARY FOCUS OF REVELATION 

tureprofitable for believers ineveryage(2 Tim. 3:16-17)? Actu- 
ally, it is the futurists who have made the Revelation irrelevant 
- for on the futurist hypothesis the book has been inapplicable 
from the time it was written until the twentieth century! Only if 
we see the Revelation in terms of its contemporary relevance is it 
anything but a dead letter. From the outset, St. John stated that 
his book was intended for "the seven churches which are in 
Asia" (1:4), and we must assume that he meant what he said. He 
clearly expected that even the most difficult symbols in the 
prophecy could be understood by his first-century readers 
(13 :18). Not once did he imply that his book was written with the 
twentieth century in mind, and that Christians would be wasting 
their time attempting to decipher it until the Scofield Reference 
Bible would become a best-selling novel. The primary relevance 
of the Book of Revelation was for its first-century readers. It 
still has relevance for us today as we understand its message and 
apply its principles to our lives and our culture. Jesus Christ still 
demands of us what He demanded of the early Church: absolute 
faithfulness to Him. 

The contemporary nature of the Revelation will be defended 
throughout the commentary, but we may consider several lines 
of evidence here. First, there is the general tone of the book, 
which is taken up with the martyrs (see, e.g., 6:9; 7:14; 12:11). 87 
The subject is clearly the present situation of the churches: The 
Revelation was written to a suffering Church in order to comfort 
believers during their time of testing (which took place, as we 
have seen, under Nero, not Domitian). J. Stuart Russell's re- 
marks on this point are particularly apt: "Was a book sent by an 
apostle to the churches of Asia Minor, with a benediction on its 
readers, a mere unintelligible jargon, an inexplicable enigma, to 
them? That can hardly be. Yet if the book were meant to unveil 
the secrets of distant times, must it not of necessity have been 
unintelligible to its first readers - and not only unintelligible, but 
even irrelevant and useless? If it spake, as some would have us 
believe, of Huns and Goths and Saracens, of medieval emperors 
and popes, of the Protestant Reformation and the French Revo- 
lution, what possible interest or meaning could it have for the 
Christian churches of Ephesus, and Smyrna, and Philadelphia, 
and Laodicea? Especially when we consider the actual circum- 



87. See LouisBouyer, The Spirituality of the New Testament and the 
Fathers, trans. Mary P. Ryan (Minneapolis: TheSeabury press, 1963),pp.l20f. 

41 



INTRODUCTION 

stances of those early Christians - many of them enduring cruel 
sufferings and grievous persecutions, and all of them eagerly 
looking for an approaching hour of deliverance which was now 
close at hand - what purpose could it have answered to send 
them a document which they were urged to read and ponder, 
which was yet mainly occupied with historical events so distant 
as to be beyond the range of their sympathies, and so obscure 
that even at this day the shrewdest critics are hardly agreed on 
any one point? 

"Is it conceivable that an apostle would mock the suffering 
and persecuted Christians of his time with dark parables about 
distant ages? If this book were really intended to minister faith 
and comfort to the very persons to whom it was sent, it must un- 
questionably deal with matters in which they were practically 
and personally interested. And does not this very obvious con- 
sideration suggest the true key to the Apocalypse? Must it not of 
necessity refer to matters of contemporary history? The only 
tenable, the only reasonable, hypothesis is that it was intended 
to be understood by its original readers; but this is as much as to 
say that it must be occupied with the events and transactions of 
their own day, and these comprised within a comparatively brief 
space of time." 88 

Second, St. John writes that the book concerns "the things 
which must shortly take place" (1:1), and warns that "the time is 
near" (1:3). In case we might miss it, he says again, at the close 
of the book, that "the Lord, the God of the spirits of the proph- 
ets, sent His angel to show to His bond-servants the things 
which must shortly take place" (22:6). Given the fact that one 
important proof of a true prophet lay in the fact that his predic- 
tions came true (Deut. 18:21-22), St. John's first-century readers 
had every reason to expect his book to have immediate signifi- 
cance. The words shortly and near simply cannot be made to 
mean anything but what they say. Some will object to this on the 
basis of 2 Peter 3:8, that "one day is with the Lord as a thousand 
years, and a thousand years as one day." But the context there is 
entirely different: Peter is exhorting his first-century readers to 
have patience with respect to God's promises, assuring them 



88. J . Stuart Russell, The Parousia: A Critical Inquiry into the New Testa- 
ment Doctrine of Our Lord's Second Coming (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, [1887] 1983), p. 366. 

42 



THE CONTEMPORARY FOCUS OF REVELATION 

that God's faithfulness to His holy Word will not wear out or 
diminish. 

The Book of Revelation is not about the Second Coming of 
Christ. It is about the destruction of Israel and Christ's victory 
over His enemies in the establishment of the New Covenant 
Temple. In fact, as we shall see, the word coming as used in the 
Book of Revelation never refers to the Second Coming. Revela- 
tion prophesies the judgment of God on apostate Israel; and 
while it does briefly point to events beyond its immediate con- 
cerns, that is done merely as a "wrap-up," to show that the un- 
godly will never prevail against Christ's Kingdom. But the main 
focus of Revelation is upon events which were soon to take 
place. 

Third, St. John identifies certain situations as contempor- 
ary: In 13:18, he clearly encourages his contemporary readers to 
calculate the "number of the Beast" and decipher its meaning; in 
17:10, one of the seven kings is currently on the throne; and St. 
John tells us that the great Harlot "is [present tense] the Great 
City, which reigns [present tense] over the kings of the earth" 
(17:18). Again, the Revelation was meant to be understood in 
terms of its contemporary significance. A futuristic interpreta- 
tion is completely opposed to the way St. John himself inter- 
prets his own prophecy. 

Fourth, we should notice carefully the words of the angel in 
22:10: "Do not seal up the words of the prophecy of this book, 
for the time is near." Again, of course, we are told explicitly that 
the prophecy is contemporary in nature; but there is more. The 
angel's statement is in contrast to the command Daniel received 
at the end of his book: "Conceal the words and seal up the book 
until the time of the end" (Dan. 12:4). Daniel was specifically 
ordered to seal up his prophecy, because it referred to "the end," 
in the distant future. But St. John is told not to seal up his 
prophecy, because the time of which it speaks is near. 

Thus, the focus of the Book of Revelation is upon the con- 
temporary situation of St. John and his first-century readers. It 
was written to show those early Christians that Jesus is Lord, 
"ruler over the kings of the earth" (Rev. 1:5). It shows that Jesus 
is the key to world history — that nothing can occur apart from 
His sovereign will, that He will be glorified in all things, and that 
His enemies will lick the dust. The Christians of that day were 

43 



INTRODUCTION 

tempted to compromise with the statism and false religions of 
their day, and they needed this message of Christ's absolute 
dominion over all, that they might be strengthened in the war- 
fare to which they were called. 

And we need this message also. We too are subjected daily to 
the threats and seductions of Christ's enemies. We too are asked 
— even by fellow Christians - to compromise with modern 
Beasts and Harlots in order to save ourselves (or our jobs or 
property or tax exemptions). And we too are faced with a 
choice: surrender to Jesus Christ or surrender to Satan. The 
Revelation speaks powerfully today, and its message to us is the 
same as it was to the early Church: that "there is not a square 
inch of ground in heaven or on earth or under the earth in which 
there is peace between Christ and Satan";'9 that our Lord de- 
mands universal submission to His rule; and that He has predes- 
tined His people to victorious conquest and dominion over all 
things in His name. We must make no compromise and give no 
quarter in the great battle of history. We are commanded to win. 

A Note on the Text 

I do not profess to be a textual critic. Nevertheless, in order to 
produce a detailed commentary, it was necessary to decide one 
way or another about which New Testament textual tradition to 
follow. The translation in this commentary is based largely on 
the recommendations of Hodges and Farstad in their "Majority 
Text" Greek New Testament,™ The basic arguments for the Ma- 
jority Text position have been presented in the works of Jakob 
van Bruggen, 91 Wilbur N. Pickering, 92 Harry A. Sturz, 93 and 



89. Cornelius Van Til, Essayson Christian Education (Nutley, NJ : Presby- 
terian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1977), p. 27. 

90. Zane C. H odges and Arthur L . F arstad, The Greek New Testament Ac- 
cording to the Majority Text (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1982). 
That is to say, where the evidence presented by Hodges and Farstad seems un- 
equivocal, I have followed it; where it is less clear, I have felt free to disagree. 

91. Jakob van Bruggen, The Ancient Text of the New Testament (Winni- 
peg: Premier Printing Ltd., 1976); idem, The Future of the Bible (Nashville: 
Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1978). 

92. Wilbur N. Pickering, The Identity of the New Testament Text (Nash- 
ville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1977). 

93. Harry A. Sturz, The Byzantine Text-Type in New Testament Textual 
Criticism (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1984). Sturz takes a much 

44 



OVERVIEW OF REVELATION 

others; 94 they do not need to be rehearsed here. I do wish to 
stress, however, that the issue is not really one of majority (i.e., 
simply counting manuscripts) but catholicity: The point of the 
"Majority Text" is that it is the Catholic Text, the New Testa- 
ment used by the universal Church of all ages 95 — in contrast to 
the so-called "critical text" of most modern translations, repre- 
senting a tiny, variant tradition produced in Egypt. 

Overview of Revelation 

The following outline is simply a more detailed version of 
the covenantal structure mentioned above. The Revelation is so 
complex that one is tempted to indulge in endless structural 
analyses (some will be noted as we proceed through the com- 
mentary). There is one further point that should not be missed 
.at the outset, however. Overlaying the whole book is the theme 
of the Bridegroom and the Bride, and the prophecy is divided 
right in the middle between these two motifs. Thus: 

I. The Bridegroom, Chapters 1-11: This section begins 
(1:9-20) and ends (10:1-7) with visions of the Son of Man, clothed 
in glory. 

H. The Bride, Chapters 12-22: This section begins (12:1-2) 
and ends (21:9-27) with visions of the Church, clothed in glory. 

more moderate position than do H odges, Pickering, and the other defenders 
of the M ajority Text. H is valuable study demonstrates that the so-called 
"Byzantine" (i.e. Majority Text) readings are both early and independent. 

Thus, while he does not believe that the Byzantine text is "primary," he shows 
that it cannot be regarded as "secondary" either. 

94, Cf. David Otis Fuller, cd., WhichBible? (Grand Rapids: International 
Publishers, fifth ed., 1975); True or False? The Westcott-Hort Textual Theory 
Examined (Grand Rapids: International Publishers, 1973); Counterfeit or Gen- 
uine? -Mark 16? John 8? (Grand Rapids: International Publishers, 1975); Ed- 
ward F. Hills, The King James Version Defended! (Des Moines: Christian Re- 
search Press, 1956, 1973). It is important to note, however, that the position of 
the Majority-Text advocates is not quite the same as that of the defenders of 
the King J ames Version (or of theTextus Receptus). The argument of this lat- 
ter group is that the true text has been providentially preserved in theTextus 
Receptus readings, even in those cases (e.g., 1 J ohn 5:7; Rev. 22:19) where the 
actual Greek manuscript evidence is either slim or nonexistent. It is interesting 
that (in contrast to the rest of the New Testament) the Majority Text readings 
for the Book of Revelation are more often in agreement with the "critical text" 
than with theTextus Receptus. 

95. For this reason, it is most unfortunate that Hodges and Farstad chose to 
ignore the readings of the traditional lectionaries i n collating their edition (The 
Greek New Testament According to the Majority Text, p. xviii). 

45 



INTRODUCTION 
Outline of Revelation 

I . Preamble: St. John's Vision of the Son of Man (1:1-20) 

II. Historical Prologue: Letters to the Seven Churches (2:1-3:22) 

A. Ephesus (2:1-7) 

B. Smyrna (2:8-11) 

C. Pergamum (2:12-17) 

D. Thyatira (2:18-29) 

E. Sardis (3:1-6) 

F. Philadelphia (3:7-13) 

G. Laodicea (3:14-22) 

III. Stipulations: The Seven Seals (4:1-7:17) 

A. The Throne (4:1-11) 

B. The Sealed Book (5:1-5) 

C. The Lamb Standing as Slain (5:6-14) 

D. The First Four Seals: Horsemen (6:1-8) 

E. The Fifth Seal: Martyrs (6:9-11) 

F. The Sixth Seal: De-Creation (6:12-17) 

G. The 144,000 Sealed (7:1-8) 

H. The Innumerable Multitude (7:9-17) 

IV. Sanctions: The Seven Trumpets (8:1-14:20) 

A. The Seventh Seal: The Incense Altar (8:1-5) 

B. The First Four Trumpets (8:6-13) 

C. The Fifth Trumpet: Locusts from the Abyss (9:1-12) 

D. The Sixth Trumpet: The Army of Myriads (9:13-21) 

E. The Angel of the Oath (10:1-7) 

F. The Little Book (10:8-11) 
G The Two Witnesses (11:1-14) 

H. The Seventh Trumpet: The Kingdom Comes (11:15-19) 
I. The Woman, the Seed, and the Dragon (12:1-6) 
J. Michael and the Dragon (12:7-12) 
K. The Flight of the Woman (12:13-17) 
L. The Beast from the Sea (13:1-10) 
M. The Beast from the Land (13:11-18) 
N. The Lamb and the 144,000 on Mount Zion (14:1-5) 
O. The Gospel and the Poisoned Cups (14:6-13) 
P. The Harvest and the Vintage of the Land (14:14-20) 
V. Succession Arrangements: The Seven Chalices (15:1-22:21) 

A. The Song of Victory (15:1-4) 

B. The Sanctuary is Opened (15:5-8) 

C. The First Four Chalices: God's Creation Takes 

Vengeance (16:1-9) 

D. The Last Three Chalices: It Is Finished! (16:10-21) 

46 



OVERVIEW OF REVELATION 

E. Babylon: The Great Harlot (17:1-5) 

F. Babylon: The Mystery Explained (17:6-18) 

G. Babylon Is Fallen! (18:1-8) 

H. Reactions to Babylon's Fall (18:9-20) 

I. Babylon Is Thrown Down (18:20-24) 

J. The Marriage Supper of the Lamb (19:1-10) 

K. The Rider onthe White Horse (19:11-16) 

L. The Feast of the Scavengers (19:17-18) 

M. The Destruction of the Beasts (19:19-21) 

N. The Binding of Satan (20:1-3) 

O. The First Resurrection and the Last Battle (20:4-10) 

P. The Final Judgment (20:11-15) 

Q. The New Creation (21:1-8) 

R. The New Jerusalem (21:9-27) 

S. The River of Life (22:1-5) 

T. Come, Lord Jesus! (22:6-21) 



47 



Part One 

PREAMBLE: THE SON OF MAN 

(Revelation 1) 

Introduction 

The Preamble in Deuteronomy (1:1-5) begins: "These are the 
words. . . ."• The text then identifies the speaker as Moses, who 
as mediator of the Covenant has been "commanded" to give and 
expound God's "law" to Israel. "Yahweh is, therefore, the Suze- 
rain who gives the covenant and Moses is his vicegerent and the 
covenant mediator. This section thus corresponds to the pream- 
ble of the extra-biblical treaties, which also identified the 
speaker, the one who by the covenant was declaring his lordship 
and claiming the vassal's obedience."2 The Preamble in Revela- 
tion begins with a similar expression: "The Revelation of Jesus 
Christ, which God gave Him to show to His servants, the things 
that must shortly take place; and He sent and signified it by His 
angel to His servant John, who bore witness to the Word of God 
and to the Testimony of Jesus Christ, even to all that he saw" 
(1:1-2). 

The purpose of the covenantal Preamble is thus to proclaim 
the lordship of the Great King, declaring his transcendence and 
immanence and making it clear from the outset that his will is to 
be obeyed by the vassals, his servants. Biblical treaties set forth 
God's transcendence and immanence by referring to one or 
more of three activities: creation, redemption, and revelation. It 
is the latter two that are especially emphasized in Revelation's 



1. The Hebrew title of Deuteronomy is simply: The Words. 

2. Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1963), p. 30. 

49 



PART ONE :THE SON OF MAN 

Preamble. We have already noted the stress on divine revelation 
in the opening sentence, and this is underscored in the following 
verses. The churches are to "hear the words of the prophecy, 
and keep the things that are written in it," and the Lord pro- 
nounces a special blessing upon those who obey (1:3); St. John 
again speaks of himself as one who has borne witness to "the 
Word of God and the Testimony of Jesus" (1:9); further, he tells 
of the revelation that came to him in terms of the standard and 
familiar patterns of covenantal revelation throughout Biblical 
history: "I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day, and I heard be- 
hind mea loud Voice like the sound of a trumpet, saying: Write 
in a book what you see. . . ." (1:10-11; see below). 

Redemption is also stressed in this passage: "Jesus Christ, 
the faithful Witness, the Firstborn from the dead, and the Ruler 
of the kings of the earth . . . who loves us and released us from 
our sins by His blood . . . has made us to be a Kingdom, priests 
to His God and Father; to Him be the glory and dominion for- 
ever and ever. Amen" (1:5-6). Moreover, Christ is specifically 
stated to be the Redeemer, the Son of Man, who "comes with 
the clouds" in His glorious Ascension to the Father and coming 
judgment upon Israel to receive worldwide dominion, glory, 
and a Kingdom; who will be seen by "those who pierced him," 
and mourned over by "all the tribes of the Land" (1:7; cf. Dan. 
7:13-14; Zech. 12:10-14; Matt. 24:30; John 19:37; Eph. 1:20-22). 
St. John's vision of Christ develops the idea of His redemptive 
work: He is clothed as the High Priest (1:13), revealed as the in- 
carnate Glory of God (1:14-15), the Creator and Sustainer of the 
world, whose powerful Word goes forth to conquer the nations 
(1:16); who died, and rose again from the dead, and who is alive 
forevermore (1:17-18). 



50 



KING OF KINGS 

Title and Benediction (1:1-3) 

1 The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to show 
His servants the things that must shortly take place; and He 
sent and signified it by His angel to His servant John; 

2 who bore witness to the Word of God and to the Witness of 
Jesus Christ, even to all that he saw. 

3 Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of the 
prophecy, and keep the things that are written in it; for the 
time is near. 

1 St. John makes it clear from the outset that his book is a 
revelation, an unveiling or disclosure of God's purposes. It is 
not intended to be mysterious or enigmatic; it is, emphatically, a 
revealing of its subject. Specifically, it is the Revelation of Jesus 
Christ, which God gave Him - in other words, a revelation me- 
diated by our Lord Himself (cf. Heb. 1:2), about the things that 
must shortly take place. The Revelation, therefore, is not con- 
cerned with either the scope of world history or the end of the 
world, but with events that were in the near future to St. John 
and his readers. As we shall see throughout the commentary, the 
Book of Revelation is a "covenant lawsuit," prophesying the 
outpouring of God's wrath on Jerusalem. It is a prophecy of the 
period known in Scripture as "the Last Days," meaning the last 
days of the covenantal nation of Israel, the forty-year "genera- 
tion" (Matt. 24:34) between the Ascension of Christ (a.d. 30) 
and the Fall of Jerusalem to the Remans (a.d. 70). 1 It foretells 



1. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 

(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 112, 115-22. 1 have explained this 
in much greater detail in a series of articles on the Last Days, published in The 
Geneva Review, P.O. Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. 

51 



1:1 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

events that St. John expected his readers to see very soon. 

This clearly militates against any "futurist" interpretation of the 
book. The futurists would have it that St. John was warning the 
Christians of his day mostly about things they would never see - 
meaning that the Book of Revelation has been irrelevant for 1900 
years ! To claim that the book has relevance only for our genera- 
tion is egocentric; and it is contrary to the testimony of the book 
itself. It must be stressed that the Greek expression for our Eng- 
lish word shortly plainly means soon, and those who first read the 
phrase would not have understood it to mean anything else (cf. 
Luke 18:8; Acts 12:7; 22:18; 25:4; Rem. 16:20; Rev. 22:6). A fu- 
turist interpretation is refuted in the very first verse of Revelation. 

Before we go any further, we should also note that St. John's 
opening statement presupposes the Biblical philosophy of his- 
tory: God is Lord of all, He has an all-embracing plan for His 
creation, and He rules every atom of reality according to His 
plan. After all, how does God know the future? The Bible does 
not indicate that God has some sort of crystal ball with which 
He can perceive future events. Think about it. There is really no 
such thing as "the future," in the sense of something "out there" 
that can be divined with the proper equipment. To say that 
something is in the future is simply to say that it does not yet ex- 
ist. How then does God know the future? The Bible gives only 
one answer: God knows the future because He planned it: 

The Lord has established His throne in the heavens, and His 
Kingdom rules over all. (Ps. 103:19) 

Our God is in the heavens; He does whatever He pleases. (Ps. 
115:3) 

And all the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as noth- 
ing, but He does according to His will in the host of heaven and 
among the inhabitants of earth; and no one can hold back His 
hand, or say to Him: What have You done? (Dan. 4:35) 

We have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined 
according to His purpose who works all things after the counsel 
of His will. (Eph. 1:11) 

Thus, even though "the future" does not yet exist, it is abso- 
lutely certain and secure, because the all-powerful Lord of the 
universe has infallibly planned it. He "gives life to the dead and 

52 



KING OF KINGS 1:1 

calls into being that which does not exist" (Rem. 4:17). God 
knows all things exhaustively because He planned all things ex- 
haustively. 

Arthur Pink wrote: "The Lord God omnipotent reigneth. 
His government is exercised over inanimate matter, over the 
brute beasts, over the children of men, over angels good and 
evil, and over Satan himself. No revolving of a world, no shin- 
ing of a star, no storm, no movement of a creature, no actions 
of men, no errands of angels, no deeds of the Devil — nothing in 
all the vast universe can come to pass otherwise than God has 
eternally purposed. Here is a foundation for faith. Here is a 
resting place for the intellect. Here is an anchor for the soul, 
both sure and steadfast. It is not blind fate, unbridled evil, man 
or Devil, but the Lord Almighty who is ruling the world, ruling 
it according to His own good pleasure and for His own eternal 
glory."2 

Now St. John says that these things regarding the future 
were signified, or "sign-ified, " to him by the angel. The use of 
this word tells us that the prophecy is not simply to be taken as 
"history written in advance." It is a book of signs, symbolic rep- 
resentations of the approaching events. The symbols are not to 
be understood in a literal manner. We can see this by St. John's 
use of the same term in his Gospel (12:33; 18:32; 21:19). In each 
case, it is used of Christ "signifying" a future event by a more or 
less symbolic indication, rather than by a prosaic, literal de- 
scription. And this is generally the form of the prophecies in the 
Revelation. It is a book of symbols from beginning to end. As 
G. R. Beasley-Murray well said, "The prophet wishes to make 
clear that he does not provide photographs of heaven." 3 This 
does not mean the symbols are unintelligible; the interpretation 
is not what any individual chooses to make it. Nor, on the other 
hand, are the symbols written in some sort of code, so that all 
we need is a dictionary or grammar of symbolism to "translate" 
the symbols into English. The only way to understand St. John's 
system of symbolism is to become familiar with the Bible itself. 



2. Arthur Pink, The Sovereignty of God (London: The Banner of Truth 
Trust, [1928] 1968), pp. 43f. 

3. G. R. Beasley-Murray, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William 
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., [1974] 1981), p. 51. 

53 



1:2-3 PART ONE : THE SON OF MAN 

2-3 An important relationship is set up here. Verse 1 showed 
us Jesus Christ giving the Revelation to St. John; now St. John 
states that he himself bore witness to the Word of God and to 
the Witness of Jesus Christ. Thus we see that Jesus is the pre- 
eminent Witness-Bearer, testifying to His servants; and we see 
also that St. John bears witness of Christ's Witness, testifies of 
Christ's Testimony. He can do this because he is one of Christ's 
servants, and has become like his Master. In giving testimony, 
St. John is conformed to the image of Christ. These two pat- 
terns - Christ and His servants bearing dual witness, and 
Christ's servants bearing His image - are carried on throughout 
the book, and will inform our understanding of such passages as 
11:4-12. 

Because this dual testimony (the Book of Revelation) is the 
very Word of God, a blessing — the first of the prophecy's seven 
"beatitudes" (1:3; 14:13; 16:15; 19:9; 20:6; 22:7; 22:14) -is pro- 
nounced upon those who are faithful to its message. Let us note 
the specific form of the blessing, for it offers another important 
pointer to the book's content: Blessed is he who reads and those 
who hear. St. John has written this prophecy, not merely (or pri- 
marily) for individual edification, but for the Church in its offi- 
cial gathering for worship. From the beginning, the Book of 
Revelation is placed in a liturgical setting, in which a Reader 
reads out the prophecy to the congregation. The Greek word for 
reads is often used in the New Testament for this liturgical activ- 
ity (Luke 4:16; Acts 13:27; 15:21; 2 Cor. 3:15; Eph. 3:4; Col. 
4:16; 1 Thess. 5:27; 1 Tim. 4:13). The Book of Revelation, as we 
shall see, is greatly concerned with liturgy; indeed, worship is a 
central theme of the prophecy. By showing us how God's will is 
done in heavenly worship, St. John reveals how the Church is to 
perform His will on earth. 

From the liturgy of special worship we go out into the world, 
to serve God in the liturgy of life. We respond to Truth 
("Amen") in special worship, and then respond further in gen- 
eral worship, throughout our whole life. St. John's benediction 
is thus not only for the one who reads and those who hear, but 
for those who keep its message. The goal of the book is not 
merely to inform us about "prophetic" events. The goal of apos- 
tolic instruction is always ethical: It is written to produce "love 
from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith" 

54 



KING OF KINGS 1:4-6 

(lTim. 1:5). The Revelation gives us commandments to keep; 
and, in particular, the first-century readers were to heed and 
obey its instruction, for the crisis was upon them. The time is 
near, St. John warns, again emphasizing the contemporary rele- 
vance of his prophecy. He repeats this warning at the end of the 
book (22:6-7, 10). The ancient world would soon be in an uproar 
as kingdoms shook and crumbled to their foundations, and the 
Christians needed the Revelation as a stable guide during the 
period of dramatic change which was to come. The end of the 
world was approaching - not the destruction of the physical 
universe, but the passing away of the old world-order, the gov- 
erning of the world around the central sanctuary in Jerusalem. 
God had established a new nation, a new priesthood, a new hu- 
manity worshiping in a new sanctuary. God's House was nearing 
completion, and the old, provisional dwelling, like scaffolding, 
was about to be torn away. 

Greeting and Doxology (1:4-8) 

4 J ohn to the seven churches in Asia: Grace to you and peace 
from Him who is, and who was, and who is to come, and 
from the seven Spirits who are before His Throne, 

5 and from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful Witness, the First- 
born from the dead, and the Ruler of the kings of the earth. 
To Him who loves us and released us from our sins by His 
blood, 

6 and has made us to be a Kingdom and priests to His God 
and Father; to Him be the glory and the dominion forever 
and ever. Amen. 

7 Behold, He is coming with the Clouds, and every eye will see 
Him, even those who pierced Him; and all the tribes of the 
Land will mourn over Him. Even so, amen. 

8 I am the Alpha and the Omega, says the Lord God, who is 
and who was and who is to come, the Almighty. 

4-6 St. John addresses his prophecy to the seven churches in 
Asia. It is obvious from the descriptions that follow (chapters 
2-3) that he definitely has these actual churches in mind. The 
notion propagated by C. 1. Scofield and others that these repre- 
sent "seven phases of the spiritual history of the church"4 is a 



4. The Scofield Reference Bible (Oxford University Press, 1909), note on 

55 



1:4-6 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

mere fiction, with no objective evidence; and it is quite arbitrarily 
and selectively applied. There are at least three fallacious pre- 
suppositions held by those who advocate this doctrine. 

First, the "seven ages" doctrine presupposes that the Book of 
Revelation covers all of Church history, from beginning to end. 
In defending his view, Scofield says: "It is incredible that in a 
prophecy covering the church period there should be no such 
foreview." 5 Very true, perhaps; but who says the Book of Reve- 
lation does cover Church history? St. John certainly doesn't. 
His only claim is that the prophecy covers "the things that must 
shortly take place" (1:1), and that the time of which it speaks is 
near (1:3). Thus, the most basic presupposition of the "seven 
ages" view is utterly false. 

The second presupposition holds that the Church will end in 
defeat and apostasy: The Laodicean, lukewarm, practically 
apostate church, about which Christ has nothing good to say 
(3:14-22), is supposed to symbolize the Church of Jesus Christ at 
the end of the age. (A corollary of this view is that the "Last 
Days" spoken of in Scripture, in which apostasy is rampant, are 
the actual last days of earth's history.) The fact that the Church 
ends in victory and triumph is, of course, what the present com- 
mentary is intended to demonstrate; thus no more need be said 
here. But it is important to note that the notion of end-time 
apostasy is a presupposition of the "seven ages" view; and those 
who hold it are assuming what they purport to prove. 

The third presupposition, of course, is that we are living in 
the last age of the Church (again, we should note that these peo- 
ple are too often unable to think of themselves as living at any 
time other than the climax of history). This presupposition is 
erroneous. The prophecies of the glorious condition of the 
Church, to be fulfilled before the return of Christ, are far from 
their accomplishment. We probably have thousands of years to 
go before the End. We are still in the early Church! And, while 
it is fashionable for modern Christian intellectuals to speak of 

Revelation 1:20; this notion has also been popularized in the notes of such 
"study Bibles" as the Thompson Chain-Reference Bible: New International 
Version (Indianapolis: B. B. Kirkbride Bible Co.; Grand Rapids: The Zonder- 
van Corporation, 1983), "Outline Studies of the Bible," No. 4308J ('The Seven 
Churches of Asia"), p. 1602. 
5. Ibid. 

56 



KING OF KINGS 1:4-6 

our civilization as "post-Christian," we should turn that around 
and make it Biblically accurate: Our culture is not post-Christian 
— our culture is still largely pre-Christian ! 6 

Although, therefore, we may not say that the seven churches 
represent seven ages in Church history, there is an important 
point to be observed here. The fact that seven, churches are men- 
tioned in a book packed with numerical symbols should not be 
overlooked. Seven is the number in Scripture that indicates 
qualitative fullness, the essential nature of a thing (as ten indi- 
cates "manyness," a fullness of quantity); here it represents the 
fact that the Revelation is intended for the whole Church in 
every age. The messages to the churches of Asia are to be ap- 
plied to all, just as St. Paul's letters to the Remans and the Phil- 
ippians have worldwide significance. But in our application of 
these letters, we must be careful not to rip them out of their his- 
torical context.' 

St. John uses the characteristic blessing of the apostles: 
grace (the favor of God bestowed upon those who, apart from 
Christ, deserve wrath) and peace (the state of permanent recon- 
ciliation with God through Christ's atonement). These blessings, 
he says, are from each member of the Godhead: the Father, the 
Holy Spirit, and the Son. Each of the Three participates fully 
and equally in extending grace and peace to the elect. The 
Father chose us from before the foundation of the world, and 
sent His Son to redeem us; the Son, in our place, lived a perfect 
life in obedience to the Law and paid the full penalty for our 
sins; and the Spirit applies the work of Father and Son through 
regeneration and sanctification. The fitting summary of all God 
has done for us is contained in these words: grace and peace. 



6. Cf. LoraineBoettner, The Millennium (Philadelphia: The Presbyterian 
and Reformed Publishing Co., 1957), pp. 38-47, 63-66; Benjamin B. Warfield, 
"Are There Few That Be Saved?" in Biblical and Theological Studies (Phila- 
delphia: The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1968), pp. 334-350. 
Warfield cites William Temple: 'The earth will in all probability be habitable 
for myriads of years yet. If Christianity is the final religion, the church is still 
in its infancy. Two thousand years are as two days. The appeal to the 'primitive 
church' is misleading; we are the 'primitive church' "; and J ames Adderly: 
"But we must remember that Christianity is a very young religion, and that we 
are only at the beginning of Christian history even now" (pp. 347f.). 

7. It so happens, however, that there is a sense in which St. J ohn intended 
his descriptions of these seven churches to be legitimately related to seven 
"ages" of the Church; see the introduction to Part 1 1 , below. 

57 



1:4-6 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

The Persons of the Trinity are named here in liturgical (as 
distinguished from theological) order. Michael Wilcock's expla- 
nation is very helpful: "John's vision is going to take him into 
the heavenly sanctuary, of which the Jewish Tabernacle was a 
copy and shadow (Heb.8:5); and perhaps the unusual order of 
the Trinity here (Father, Spirit, Son) corresponds to the plan of 
the earthly sanctuary, where the ark in the Holy of Holies repre- 
sents the throne of God, the seven-branched lampstand in the 
Holy Place before it represents the Spirit, 8 and in the courtyard 
before that stands the altar, with its priest and sacrifice both rep- 
resenting, of course, the redeeming work of Christ ." 9 

The greeting is a clear expression of the Trinitarian faith - 
later hammered out in creedal form at the councils of Nicea 
(a.d. 325) and Constantinople (381), but certainly explicit in the 
teaching of the Bible. 10 The doctrine of the Trinity is that there 
is one God (one Person) who is three distinct Persons — Father, 
Son, and Holy Spirit -and that each of those Persons is Himself 
God. There are not three Gods - only One. Yet those three Per- 
sons are not different ways or modes of God making Himself 
known to us, nor are they to be confused with one another; they 
are three distinct Persons. Cornelius Van Til states it about as 
clearly as anyone has: "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost 
are each a personality and together constitute the exhaustively 
personal God. There is an eternal, internal self-conscious inter- 
action between the three persons of the Godhead. They are co- 
substantial. Each is as much God as are the other two. The Son 
and the Spirit do not derive their being from the Father. The di- 
versity and the unity in the Godhead are therefore equally ulti- 
mate; they are exhaustively correlative to one another and not 
correlative to anything else." " 



8. Wilcock's footnote: "Compare 1:4 with 4:5,5:6, and Zech. 4:1-5, 10b: 
lamps =eyes= spirits. The symbolism of the lamps in 1:12, 20 is not so very 
different; here it is the Spirit, there the earthly dwelling-place of the Spirit 
(lCor.3:16), which is being depicted." 

9. M ichael Wilcock, Z Saw Heaven Opened: The Message of Revelation 

(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1975), p. 34. 

10. One of the most helpful works on the meaning of the creeds, including 
their sociological implications, isRousasJ ohn Rushdoony's The Foundations 
of Social Order: Studies in the Creeds and Councils of the Early Church 

(Tyler, TX: Thobum Press, [1968] 1978); see also Gerald Bray, Creeds, Coun- 
cils, and Christ (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1984). 

11. Cornelius Van Til, Apologetics (class syllabus, Westminster Theological 
Seminary, Philadelphia, 1959), p. 8. 

58 



KING OF KINGS 1:4-6 

What this means is that God is not "basically" one, with the 
individual Persons being derived from the oneness; nor is God 
"basically" three, with the unity of the Persons being secondary. 
Neither God's oneness nor His "threeness" is prior to the other; 
both are basic. God is One, and God is Three. There are three 
distinct, individual Persons, each of whom is God. But there is 
only One God. 12 To put it in more philosophical language, 
God's unity (oneness) and diversity (threeness, individuality) are 
equally ultimate. God is basically One and basically Three at the 
same time. )3 

First, St. John describes the Father: Him who is, and who 
was, and who is to come. Philip Barrington has caught the spirit 
of this expression, which is atrocious Greek but excellent theol- 
ogy: the Being and the Was and the Coming. 14 God is eternal 
and unchangeable (Mai. 3:6); as the early Christians faced what 
seemed to them an uncertain future, they had to keep before 
them the absolute certainty of God's eternal rule. God is not at 
the mercy of an environment; He is not defined by any external 
conditions; all things exist in terms of His inerrant Word. 
Threatened, opposed, and persecuted by those in power, they 
were nevertheless to rejoice in the knowledge of their eternal 
God who "is to come," who is coming continually in judgment 
against His adversaries. God's coming refers not simply to the 
end of the world but to His unceasing rule over history. He 
comes again and again to deliver His people and to judge the 



12. Contrast this with the all -too- common Sunday School "illustrations" of 
the Trinity- such as an egg, the sun, a pie, or water. These are generally more 
misleading than helpful. In fact, their ultimate implications are heretical. They 
end up either dividing God into three "parts" - like an egg's shell, white, and 
yolk - or showing God as one substance taking on three different forms, like 
water (solid, liquid and gas). 

13. On the radical impact of the doctrine of the Trinity in every area of life, 
see R. J . Rushdoony, Foundations of Social Order and The One and the Many 
(Tyler, TX:Thoburn Press, 1978). 

14. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), p. 74. In effect, the whole phrase is one proper noun, and indeclinable. 
The grammatical problem arises from St. J ohn's attempt to render into Greek 
the theological nuances contained in the Hebrew of Exodus 3:14: I AM WHO 
I AM. St. J ohn is not afraid to massacre the Greek language in order to get 
across a point, as in J ohn 16:13, where he "incorrectly" uses a masculine pro- 
noun in order to emphasize the Personality of the Holy Spirit (Spirit in Greek 
is neuter, but St. J ohn wanted to stress that He is truly a He and not an It). 

59 



1:4-6 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

wicked. 15 

Second, St. John speaks of the Holy Spirit as the seven Spir- 
its who are before His Throne. Although some have tried to see 
this as a reference to seven angels, it is inconceivable that grace 
and peace can originate from anyone but God. The Person 
spoken of here is clearly on a par with the Father and the Son. 
The picture of the Holy Spirit here (as also in 3:1; 4:5; 5:6) is 
based on Zechariah 4, in which the prophet sees the Church as a 
lampstand with seven lamps, supplied without human agency by 
an unceasing flow of oil through "seven spouts to the seven 
lamps" (v. 2) - the interpretation of which is, as God tells Zech- 
ariah: "Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit" (v. 6). 
The Holy Spirit's filling and empowering work in the Church is 
thus described in terms of the number seven, symbolizing full- 
ness and completeness. So it is here in Revelation: "To the seven 
churches . . . grace and peace be unto you . . . from the seven 
Spirits." And the Spirit's work in the Church takes place in 
terms of God's dominion and majesty, before His Throne. This 
is, in fact, a marked emphasis in the Book of Revelation: The 
word Throne occurs here forty-six times (the New Testament 
book that comes closest to matching that number is the Gospel 
of Matthew, where it is used only five times). The Revelation is a 
book, above all, about rule: it reveals Jesus Christ as the Lord 
of history, restoring His people to dominion through the power 
of the Holy Spirit. 

The word Throne is used particularly in Scripture to refer to 
God's official court, where He receives official worship from His 
people on the Sabbath. ] * The entire vision of the Revelation was 
seen on the Lord's Day (1:10) - the Christian day of corporate, 



15. There are several good discussions of the various meanings of Coming 
in Scripture. See Oswald T. Allis, Prophecy andtheChurch (Grand Rapids: 
Baker Book House, 1945, 1947), pp. 175-91; Loraine Boettner, The Millen- 
nium, pp. 252-62; Roderick Campbell, Israel and the New Covenant (Tyler, 
TX: Geneva Ministries, [1954] 1983), pp. 68-80; David Chilton, Paradise Re- 
stored, pp. 67-75, 97-105; Geerhardus Vos, The Pauline Eschatology (Grand 
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1930), pp. 70-93. 

16. See, for example, 1 Chron.28:2; Ps. 132:7-8, 13-14; I sa. 11:10. Cf. M ere- 
dith G. Kline, Images oftheSpirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980), 
pp. 20 f, 39ff.,46, lllff. As Geerhardus Vos observed, the significance of the 
Tabernacle in the Old Testament is that "it is the palace of the King in which 
the people render H im homage" (Biblical Theology: Old and New Testaments 

[Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1948], p. 168). 



KING OF KINGS 1:4-6 

official worship; and all the action in the book centers on the 
worship around the Throne of God. St. John wants us to see 
that the public, official worship of the Sovereign Lord is central 
to history - history both as a whole and in its constituent parts 
(i.e., your life and mine). The Spirit communicates grace and 
peace to the churches, in the special sense, through public wor- 
ship. We can go so far as to say this: We cannot have continuing 
fellowship with God, and receive blessings from Him, apart 
from the public worship of the Church, the "place" of access to 
the Throne. The Spirit works in individuals, yes - but He does 
not work apart from the Church. His corporate and individual 
workings may be distinguished, but they cannot be separated. 
The notion that we can have fellowship with God, yet separate 
ourselves from the Church and from the corporate worship of 
the Body of Christ, is an altogether pagan idea, utterly foreign 
to Holy Scripture. The Church, as the Church, receives grace 
and peace from the sevenfold Spirit; and He is continually ^be- 
fore the Throne, the special sphere of His ministry. 

"Our lives are congested and noisy. It is easy to think of the 
Church and the sacraments as competing for our attention with 
the other world of daily life, leading us off into some other life 
- secret, rarified, and remote. We might do better to think of 
that practical daily world as something incomprehensible and 
unmanageable unless and until we can approach it sacrament- 
ally through Christ. Nature and the world are otherwise beyond 
our grasp; time also, time that carries all things away in a mean- 
ingless flux, causing men to despair unless they see in it the pat- 
tern of God's action, reflected in the liturgical year, the neces- 
sary road to the New Jerusalem." 17 

The third member of the Godhead (in this liturgical order) is 
Jesus Christ, spoken of by St. John under three designations: 
the faithful Witness, the Firstborn from the dead, and the Ruler 
of the kings of the earth. R. J. Rushdoony has forcefully 
pointed out how the term Witness (in Greek, martyr), has ac- 
quired connotations foreign to the word's original meaning: "In 
the Bible, the witness is one who works to enforce the law and 
assist in its execution, even to the enforcement of the death pen- 



17. Alexander Schmemann, Church, World, Mission: Reflections on Ortho- 
doxy in the West (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir'sSeminary Press, 1979), p. 226. 

61 



1:4-6 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

alty. 'Martyr' has now come to mean the exact reverse, i.e., one 
who is executed rather than an executioner, one who is perse- 
cuted rather than one who is central to prosecution. The result is 
a serious misreading of Scripture. . . . The significance of Jesus 
Christ as 'the faithful and true witness' is that He not only wit- 
nesses against those who are at war against God, but He also ex- 
ecutes them. . . . Jesus Christ therefore witnesses against every 
man and nation that establishes its life on any other premise 
than the sovereign and triune God and His infallible and ab- 
solute law- word." 1S 

The theme of Christ as the preeminent Witness is important 
in Revelation, as we noted above on v. 2. By way of supplement- 
ing Rushdoony's analysis, we may observe that a central aspect 
of Christ's witness-bearing was His death at the hands of false 
witnesses. Those in this book who bear witness in His image will 
also do so at the cost of their lives (6:9; 12:11). The modern con- 
notation of the word martyr is thus not so far-fetched and un- 
biblical as it might appear at first glance; but it is necessary, as 
Rushdoony has shown, to recall the basic meaning of the term. 

Jesus is also the Firstborn from the dead. By His resurrec- 
tion from the dead, He has attained supremacy, having "first 
place in everything" (Col. 1:18). As Peter said on the Day of Pen- 
tecost: "This Jesus God raised up again, to which we are all wit- 
nesses. Therefore having been exalted to the right hand of God, 
and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy 
Spirit, He has poured forth this which you both see and hear. 
For it was not David who ascended into heaven, but he himself 
says: The Lord said to my Lord, Sit at My right hand, until I 
make Thine enemies a footstool for Thy feet. Therefore let all 
the house of Israel know for certain that God has made Him 
both Lord and Christ -this Jesus whom you crucified" (Acts 
2:32-36). God fulfilled the promise He had made long before: "I 
will make Him My Firstborn, the highest of the kings of the 
earth" (Ps. 89:27). 

St. John obviously had this passage from the Psalms in 
mind, for the next designation he gives to our Lord is the Ruler 
of the kings of the earth. Christ's priority and sovereignty are 



18. Rousas J ohn Rushdoony, The Institutes of Biblical Law (Nutley, NJ 
The Craig Press, 1973), pp. 573f. 

62 



KING OF KINGS 1:4-6 

above all. He is not "only" the Savior, waiting for a future cata- 
clysmic event before He can become King; He is the universal 
King now, in this age - sitting at His Father's right hand while all 
His enemies are being put under His feet. This process of taking 
dominion over all the earth in terms of His rightful title is going 
on at this moment, and has been ever since He rose from the 
dead. As Firstborn (and only-begotten!), Christ possesses the 
crown rights of all creation: "All authority in heaven and earth 
has been given to Me," He claimed (Matt. 28:18). All nations 
have been granted to Him as His inheritance, and the kings of 
earth are under court order to submit to Him (Ps. 2:8-12). Com- 
menting on Christ's title Ruler of the kings of the earth, William 
Symington wrote: "The persons who are here supposed to be 
subject to Christ, are kings, civil rulers, supreme and subordi- 
nate, all in civil authority, whether in the legislative, judicial, or 
executive branches of government. Of such Jesus Christ is 
Prince; - oapxcov, ruler, lord, chief, the first in power, authority, 
and dominion." 19 

This, in fact, is precisely the reason for the persecution of 
Christians by the State. Jesus Christ by the Gospel has asserted 
His absolute sovereignty and dominion over the rulers and na- 
tions of earth. They have a choice: Either submit to His govern- 
ment and law, accepting His non-negotiable terms of surrender 
and peace, or be smashed to bits by the rod of His anger. Such 
an audacious, uncompromising position is an affront to the dig- 
nit y of any self-respecting humanist — much more so to rulers 
who are accustomed to thinking of themselves as gods walking 
on earth. Perhaps this Christ can be allowed a place in the pan- 
theon, along with the rest of us gods; but for His followers to 
proclaim Him as Lord of all, whose law is binding upon all men, 
whose statutes call into judgment the legislation and decrees of 
the nations - this is too much; it is inexcusable, and cannot be 
allowed. 

It would have been much easier on the early Christians, of 
course, if they had preached the popular retreatist doctrine that 



19. William Symington, Messiah the Prince: or,The Mediatorial Dominion 
of Jesus Christ (Philadelphia: The Christian Statesman Publishing Co., [1839] 
1834), p. 208. 

63 



1:7-8 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

Jesus is Lord of the "heart," that He is concerned with "spirit- 
ual" (meaning non-earthly) conquests, but isn't the least bit in- 
terested' in political questions; that He is content to be "Lord" in 
the realm of the spirit, while Caesar is Lord everywhere else 
(i.e., where we feel it really matters). Such a doctrine would 
have been no threat whatsoever to the gods of Rome. In fact, 
Caesar couldn't ask for a more cooperative religion! Toothless, 
impotent Christianity is a gold mine for statism: It keeps men's 
attention focused on the clouds while the State picks their pock- 
ets and steals their children. 

But the early Church was not aware of this escapist teaching. 
Instead, it taught the Biblical doctrine of Christ's Lordship - 
that He is Lord of all, "Ruler of the kings of the earth." It was 
this that guaranteed their persecution, torture, and death at the 
hands of the State. And it was also this that guaranteed their ul- 
timate victory. Because Jesus is universal Lord, all opposition to 
His rule is doomed to failure, and will be crushed. Because 
Christ is King of kings, Christians are assured of two things: 
warfare to the death against all would-be-gods; and the com- 
plete triumph of the Christian faith over all its enemies. 

For this reason, St. John breaks into a doxology of praise to 
Jesus Christ, who loves us and freed us from our sins by the 
ransom-price of His blood, and has made us to be a Kingdom 
and priests to His God and Father; to Him be the glory and the 
dominion forever and ever. Not only have we been redeemed 
from our slavery, but we have been constituted as a Kingdom of 
priests. The Kingdom has begun: Christians are now ruling with 
Christ (Eph. 1:20-22; 2:6; Col. 1:13), and our dominion will in- 
crease across the world (Rev. 5:9-10). We are a victorious, con- 
quering priesthood, bringing all areas of life under His rule. 

7-8 Verse 7 announces the theme of the book, which is not 
the Second Coming of Christ, but rather the Coming of Christ 
in judgment upon Israel, in order to establish the Church as the 
new Kingdom. He is coming with the Clouds, St. John pro- 
claims, using one of the most familiar Biblical images for judg- 
ment (cf. Gen. 15:17; Ex. 13:21-22; 14:19-20, 24; 19:9, 16-19; Ps. 
18:8-14; 104:3; Isa. 19:1; Ezek. 32:7-8; Matt. 24:30; Mark 14:62; 
Acts 2:19). This is the Glory-Cloud, God's heavenly chariot by 

64 



KING OF KINGS 1:7-8 

which He makes His glorious presence known. 20 The Cloud is a 
revelation of His Throne, as He comes to protect His people 
and destroy the wicked. One of the most striking descriptions of 
God's "coming in the clouds" is in Nahum's prophecy against 
Nineveh (Nab. 1:2-8): 

The Lord is a jealous and avenging God; 

The Lord takes vengeance and is filled with wrath. 

The Lord takes vengeance on His foes 

And maintains His wrath against His enemies. 

The Lord is slow to anger and great in power; 

He will not leave the guilty unpunished. 

His way is in the whirlwind and the storm, 

And clouds are the dust of His feet. 

He rebukes the sea and dries it up; 

He makes all the rivers run dry. 

Bashan and Carmel wither 

And the blossoms of Lebanon fade. 

The mountains quake before Him 

And the hills melt away. 

The earth trembles at His presence, 

The world and all who live in it. 

Who can withstand His indignation? 

Who can endure His fierce anger? 

His wrath is poured out like fire; 

The rocks are shattered before Him. 

The Lord is good, 

A refuge in times of trouble. 

He cares for those who trust in Him, 

But with an overwhelming flood 

He will make an end of Nineveh; 

He will pursue His foes into darkness. 

His coming in the clouds thus brings judgment and deliver- 
ance in history; there is no reason, in either the overall Biblical 
usage of this term or its immediate context here, to suppose that 
the literal end of the physical world is meant (although the sense 
can certainly be applied to the Last Day as well). St. John is 
speaking of the fact, stressed throughout the "last days" period 



20. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 57ff.,97ff.;cf. Kline, Images of the 

Spirit. 

65 



1:7-8 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

by the apostles, that a crisis was quickly approaching: AsHe 
had promised, Christ would come against the present generation 
"in the clouds," in wrathful judgment against apostate Israel 
(Matt. 23-25). And every eye will see Him, even those who pierced 
Him (the Gentiles, John 19:34, 37): The crucifiers would see 
Him coming in judgment - that is, they would experience and 
understand that His Coming would mean wrath on the Land 
(cf. the use of the word see in Mark 1:44; Luke 17:22; John 3:36; 
Rem. 15:21). The Lord had used the same terminology of His 
Coming against Jerusalem at the end of that generation (Matt. 
24:30), and He even warned the high priest: "You shall see the 
Son of Man sitting at the right hand of Power, and coming on 
the clouds of heaven" (Matt. 26:64). In other words, the apos- 
tates of that evil generation would understand the meaning of 
Christ's Ascension, the definitive Coming of the Son of Man, 
the Second Adam (Dan. 7:13). In the destruction of their city, 
their civilization, their Temple, their entire world-order, they 
would understand that Christ had ascended to His Throne as 
Lord of heaven and earth. They would see that the Son of Man 
had come to the Father. 

Jesus had said also that "all the tribes of the Land will 
mourn" on the day of His Coming (Matt. 24:30), that "weeping 
shall be there and the gnashing of teeth" (Matt. 24:51). St. John 
repeats this as part of the theme of his prophecy: all the tribes of 
the Land [the Jews] will mourn over Him. Both Jesus and St. 
John thus reinterpreted this expression, borrowed from Zech- 
ariah 12:10-14, where it occurs in an original context of Israel's 
mourning in repentance. But Israel had gone beyond the point 
of no return; their mourning would not be that of repentance, 
but sheer agony and terror. 

Yet this does not negate the promises in Zechariah. Indeed, 
through Christ's judgment on Israel, by means of her excom- 
munication, the world will be saved; and, through the salvation 
of the world, Israel herself will turn again to the Lord and be 
saved (Rem. 11:11-12, 15, 23-24). Because Christ comes in the 
clouds, in history, judging men and nations, the earth is redeemed. 
He comes not simply for judgment, but for judgment unto sal- 
vation. "When Your judgments come upon the earth, the people 
of the world learn righteousness" (Isa. 26:9). From the begin- 
ning, the ultimate purpose of the coming of Christ has been re- 

66 



KING OF KINGS 1:9 

demptive: "For God did not send His Son into the world to con- 
demn the world, but to save the world through Him" ( John 
3:17). Christ "comes in the Clouds" in historical judgments so 
that the world may know the Lord God as the eternal and un- 
changeable Source and Goal of all history (Rem. 11:36), the 
Alpha and the Omega, the A and Z (cf. Isa. 44:6), who is and 
who was and who is to come, the eternal Origin and Consum- 
mation of all things. Almighty is the usual translation of the 
Greek word Pantokrator, which means the One who has all 
power and rules over everything, the New Testament equivalent 
of the Old Testament expression Lord of Hosts, the "Captain of 
the Armies" (meaning the armies of Israel, or the star/angel 
armies of heaven, or the armies of the heathen nations, whom 
God used to pour out His wrath on His disobedient people). 
Christ was about to demonstrate to Israel and to the world that 
He had ascended to the Throne as Supreme Ruler. 

Jesus Christ,Transcendent and Immanent (1:9-16) 

9 I, John, your brother and companion in the Tribulation and 
Kingdom and perseverance which are in Christ Jesus, was on 
the island of Patmos because of the Word of God and the 
Testimony of Jesus. 

10 I came to be in the Spirit on the Lord's Day, and I heard 
behind me a loud Voice like a trumpet, 

1 1 saying: Write in a book what you see and send it to the seven 
churches: to Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira.Sar- 
dis, Philadelphia and Laodicea. 

12 And I turned to see the Voice that was speaking to me. And 
when I turned I saw seven golden lampstands; 

13 and in the middle of the seven lampstands one like a Son of 
Man, clothed in a robe reaching to His feet and with a 
golden sash around His chest. 

14 And His head and His hair were white like wool, as white as 
snow, and His eyes were like blazing fire. 

15 His feet were like bronze glowing in a furnace, and His 
Voice was like the sound of rushing waters. 

16 In His right hand he held seven stars, and out of His mouth 
came a sharp two-edged sword; and His face was like the 
sun shining in its strength. 

9 In this remarkable verse we have a concise summary of St. 

67 



1:9 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

John's worldview, his fundamental outlook on what life is all 
about. It stands in stark contrast to the views of modern Ameri- 
can evangelical and dispensational theology, which holds that 
(1) there is no tribulation for the Christian, (2) Christ does not 
have a Kingdom in this age, and (3) the Christian is not required 
or expected to persevere! But for St. John and his readers, the 
Christian life did involve these things. Of course, tribulation is 
not the whole story of the Christian life; nor does the Church 
suffer identically in all times and places. As the Gospel takes 
hold of the world, as Christians take dominion, tribulation is 
lessened. But it is absolute folly (and wickedness) for Christians 
to suppose that they are somehow immune from all suffering. 
Jesus had warned his disciples that tribulation, suffering, and 
persecution would come (John 15:18-20; 16:33; 17:14-15). 

More particularly, however, St. John is thinking about a spe- 
cial period of hardship; not just tribulation in general, but the 
Tribulation, the subject of much apostolic writing as the age of 
the Last Days progressed to its climax (1 Thess. 1:6; 3:4; 2 Thess. 
1:4-10; 1 Tim. 4:1-3; 2 Tim. 3:1-12). During this period of politi- 
cal upheaval and social disruption, apostasy and persecution 
broke out with a vengeance, as Jesus had foretold (Matt. 
24:4-13). Christians suffered greatly; yet they had the certain 
knowledge that the Tribulation was but the prelude to the firm 
establishment of Christ's rule over the earth. St. Paul and St. 
Barnabus had encouraged other Asian Christians to continue in 
the faith, reminding them that "through many tribulations we 
must enter the Kingdom of God" (Acts 14:22). What gave their 
suffering meaning was that it was in Christ Jesus, in union with 
His suffering; as St. Paul wrote, "I rejoice in my sufferings for 
your sake, and I fill up what is lacking of the tribulations of 
Christ in my flesh, on behalf of His Body, the Church" (Col. 
1:24). 

Thus St. John's worldview does not involve only tribulation. 
He is also in the Kingdom ... in Christ Jesus. As we saw above 
(v. 5-6), the New Testament doctrine, based on such Old Testa- 
ment passages as Daniel 2:31-45 and 7:13-14, is that the King- 
dom has arrived in the First Coming of Jesus Christ. Since His 
Ascension to the Throne, He has been reigning "far above all 
rule and authority and power and dominion, and ever y name 
that is named, not only in this age, but also in the one to come. 

68 



KING OF KINGS 1:9 

And He put all things in subjection under His feet" (Eph. 
1:21-22; cf. Mark 1:14-15; Matt. 16:28; 28:18; Acts 2:29-36; Col. 
1:13). If all things are now in subjection under His feet, what 
more could be added to His dominion? Of course, the "rulers 
and authorities" still have got to be put down; that is what much 
of St. John's prophecy is about. But in principle, and defini- 
tively, the Kingdom has arrived. This means that we do not have 
to wait for some future redemptive or eschatological event be- 
fore we can effectively take dominion over the earth. The do- 
minion of God's people throughout the world will simply be the 
result of a progressive outworking of what Christ Himself has 
already accomplished. St. John wanted his readers to under- 
stand that they were in both the Great Tribulation and the King- 
dom - that, in fact, they were in the Tribulation precisely be- 
cause the Kingdom had come (Dan. 7:13-14). They were in a 
war, fighting for the Kingdom's victory (Dan. 7:21-22), and thus 
they needed the third element in St. John's worldview: persever- 
ance in Christ Jesus. Perseverance is an important word in the 
message of the Revelation, and St. John uses it seven times (1:9; 
2:2,3, 19; 3:10; 13:10; 14:12). 

Here, too, there is a radical contrast with much of modern 
dispensationalism. Because the diluted version of Christianity 
currently fashionable in contemporary y America rejects the con- 
cepts of the Kingship and Lordship of Christ, 21 it also rejects the 
Biblical teaching on perseverance - and the predictable result is 
that comparatively few converts of modern evangelicalism are 
able to stick with even that minimally-demanding faith! 22 The 
popular doctrine of "eternal security" is only a half-truth, at 
best: it gives people an unbiblical basis for assurance (e.g., the 



21. For a recent example of this position, see Norman Geisler, "A Premil- 
lennial View of Law and Government," Bibliotheca Sacra (J uly-September 
1985), pp. 250-66. Writing against the postmi Men nial ism of R.J . Rushdoony 
and other "reconstructionists," Geisler actually says: "Postmillenarians work 
to make a Christian America. Premillenarians work for a truly free America" 
(p. 260). The choice is clear: Shall we choose Christianity? Or shall we choose 
freedom instead? Geisler must be commended for having stated the matter 
with such precision; technically speaking, however, he is not the first to have 
posed the dilemma in this way. He stands in an ancient tradition (Gen. 3:1-5). 

22. See Walter Chantry, Today 's Gospel: Authentic or Synthetic? (Edin- 
burgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1970), and Arend J . ten Pas, The Lordship 
of Christ (Vallecito,CA: Ross House Books, 1978). 

69 



1:10 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

fact that they walked down the aisle during a revival meeting, 
etc.), rather than the kind of assurance given in Scripture - 
assurance that is related to perseverance (cf. 1 John 2:3-4). The 
Bible teaches not simply that we are preserved, but that we also 
persevere to the end (see John 10:28-29; Rem. 8:35-39; 2 Cor. 
13:5; Phil. 1:6; 2:12-13; Col. 1:21-23; 2 Pet. 1:10). 

St. John tells the suffering but reigning and persevering 
Christians of Asia that he is their brother and companion in all 
these things, even now in exile on the island of Patmos. This was 
a punishment for his apostolic activity, but the language in 
which he expresses it is interesting: Because of the Word of God 
and the Testimony of Jesus Christ. St. John does not say that he 
is imprisoned on a rock in the sea on account of his own testi- 
mony about Christ, but on account of God's Word and Jesus' 
Testimony. He suffers because God has spoken, because Jesus 
has testified. Christ the faithful Witness has borne the Testi- 
mony against the would-be gods of this age, and they have 
fought back by imprisoning the apostle. This is why the Tribula- 
tion and Kingdom and perseverance in which these believers 
share are all in Christ Jesus: His Testimony has determined the 
course of history. 

10 When St. John says he came to be in the Spirit, he does 
not mean that he felt good. The expression has nothing to do 
with his personal, subjective attitude or frame of mind; but it 
does refer to a definite experience. This is technical prophetic 
language (Matt. 22:43; cf. Num. 11:25; 2 Sam. 23:2;Ezek.2:2; 
3:24; 2 Pet. 1:21), and refers to the fact that the author is an in- 
spired apostle, receiving revelation, as he is admitted to the hea- 
venly council-chamber. 23 

St. John tells us that this vision was seen on the Lord's Day. 
The origin of this important term goes all the way back to the 
first Sabbath, when God rested from creation (Gen. 2:2-3). The 
term rest in Scripture often refers to God being seated on His 
throne as Judge, receiving worship from His creatures (1 Chron. 
28:2; Ps. 132:7-8, 13-14; Isa. 11:10; 66:1). This original Sabbath 
was the prototype of the "Day of the Lord" in Scripture, the 



23. See the discussion of the prophet in Meredith G. Kline, Images of the 
Spirit, pp. 57-96; esp. pp. 93f. 

70 



KING OF KINGS 1:11-15 

Day of Judgment. The weekly Sabbath in Israel was a re-enact- 
ment (and pre-enactment) of the first and final Day of the Lord, 24 
in which the people gathered together for judgment, execution, 
the judicial declaration of forgiveness, and the proclamation of 
the King's Word. For us too, this is the meaning of the Lord's 
Day, when we come before God's throne to be forgiven and re- 
stored, to hear His Word, and to commune with Him (thus, in a 
general sense - and not exactly the special sense in which St. 
John uses it here - all Christians are "in the Spirit" on the Lord's 
Day: In worship, we are all caught up to the Throneroom of 
God.) 25 The Lord's Day is the Day of the Lord in action. 

One of the most basic Biblical images for the Judgment is the 
Glory-Cloud, and this theophany is generally associated with 
three other images: the Spirit, the Day (or light, since the light 
of day was originally "cloned" from the light of the Cloud 26 ), 
and the Voice (often sounding like a trumpet; cf. Ex. 19:16-19). 
In fact, these three are mentioned right at the beginning in the 
Garden, when Adam and Eve "heard the Voice of the Lord God 
traversing the Garden as the Spirit of the Day, " as the text liter- 
ally reads (Gen. 3: 8). 27 What Adam and Eve heard on that 
awful day of judgment was not a gentle, cool breeze wafting 
through the eucalyptus leaves - they heard the explosive thun- 
derclaps of the God of heaven and earth blasting through the 
Garden. It was terrifying, and that is why they attempted to 
hide. Repeating this theme, St. John tells us: "I was in the Spirit 
on the Lord's Day, and I heard behind me a loud Voice like a 
trumpet." St. John was going to be caught up into the Glory- 
Cloud to receive revelation, and his readers were expected to un- 
derstand this imagery. 

U-15 The Voice of God instructs St. John to write in a book 
the Revelation and send it to the seven churches of Asia. He 
turns to see the Voice - and sees the Lord Jesus Christ. This 
minor detail establishes a pattern that is repeated throughout 
the book - John hears first, and then he sees. At the end of the 



24. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 133ff, 

25. See Kline, Images of the Spirit, pp. 97-131. 

26. Ibid., pp. 106ff. 

27. For a full exegesis of this text, see ibid., pp. 97-131; cf. Chilton, Para- 
dise Restored, pp. 58, 134ff. 

71 



1:11-15 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

prophecy (22:8) he tells us: "I, John, am the one who heard and 
saw these things. And when I heard and saw. ..." This pattern 
is not always followed in the book, but it happens often enough 
that we should be aware of St. John's use of it - for it is occa- 
sionally important in understanding how to interpret the sym- 
bols (cf. 5:5-6): The verbal revelation is necessary in order to un- 
derstand the visual revelation. 

St. John suddenly finds himself in the Holy Place, for he 
sees seven golden lampstands; and in the middle of the seven 
lampstands one like a Son of Man. The imagery here is clearly 
taken from the Tabernacle, but with a significant difference: in 
the earthly Holy Place, there was one lampstand, with seven 
lamps; here, St. John sees seven lampstands, connected to each 
other in the Person who stands in their midst. The symbolism 
involved here will be discussed under verse 20; the important 
thing to note at present is simply the picture conveyed by this 
imagery: Jesus Christ is the one Lamp stand, uniting the seven 
lamps - each of which turns out to be itself a lampstand; Christ 
is surrounded by light. As St. Germanus, the eighth-century 
Archbishop of Constantinople, put it at the outset of his work 
on the Liturgy: "The Church is an earthly heaven in which the 
super-celestial God dwells and walks about." 28 

The description of Christ in verses 13-16 involves a blend of 
Old Testament images: the Glory-Cloud, the Angel of the Lord, 
the Ancient of Days, and the Son of Man. Our understanding 
will be heightened if we read this description in conjunction 
with the following passages from Daniel: 

I kept looking 

Until thrones were set up, 

And the Ancient of Days took His seat; 

His vesture was like white snow, 

And the hair of His head like pure wool. 

His throne was ablaze with flames, 

Its wheels were a burning fire. 

A river of fire was flowing 

And coming out from before Him; 

Thousands upon thousands were attending Him, 



28. St. Germanus of Constantinople, On the Divine Liturgy, Paul Meyen- 
dorff, trans. (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1984),p. 57. 

72 



KING OF KINGS 1:11-15 

And myriads upon myriads were standing before Him; 

The court sat, 

And the books were opened. (Dan. 7:9-10) 

I kept looking in the night visions, 

And behold, with the Clouds of heaven 

One like a Son of Man was coming, 

And He came up to the Ancient of Days 

And was presented before Him. 

And to Him was given dominion, 

Glory and a Kingdom, 

That all the peoples, nations, and men of every language 

Might serve Him. 

His dominion is an everlasting dominion 

Which will not pass away; 

And His Kingdom is one 

Which will not be destroyed. (Dan. 7:13-14) 

I lifted my eyes and looked, and behold, there was a certain 
man dressed in linen, whose waist was girded with a belt of pure 
gold of Uphaz. His body also was like beryl, His face like light- 
ning, His eyes were like flaming torches, His arms and feet like 
the gleam of polished bronze, and the sound of His words like 
the sound of a multitude. Now, I, Daniel, alone saw the vision, 
while the men who were with me did not see the vision; neverthe- 
less, a great dread fell on them, and they ran away to hide them- 
selves. So I was left alone and saw this great vision; yet no 
strength was left in me, for my natural color turned to a deathly 
pallor, and I retained no strength. But I heard the sound of His 
words; and as soon as I heard the sound of His words, I fell into 
a deep sleep on my face, with my face to the ground. Then be- 
hold, a hand touched me and set me trembling on my hands and 
knees. And He said to me, "0 Daniel, man of high esteem, un- 
derstand the words that I am about to tell you and stand upright, 
for I have now been sent to you." And when He had spoken this 
word to me, I stood up trembling. (Dan. 10:5-11) 29 

These and other passages are combined to form the picture 
of Christ in St. John's introductory vision. The robe reaching to 
His feet and the golden sash around His chest 30 (cf. Ex. 28:4; 



29. Cf. the discussion of this text in relation to Rev. 12:7-9 below. 

30. According to Josephus, the priest wore the sash around his chest when he 
was at rest and "not about any laborious service" (Antiquities of the Jews, iii.vii.2). 

73 



1:11-15 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

29:5; 39:27-29; Lev. 16:4) are reminders of the official dress of 
the High Priest, whose clothing was a representation of the 
Glory-Spirit, a symbol of the radiant image of God. "Contribut- 
ing to the impression of radiance was the flame-colored linen 
material prescribed for the ephod, with its band and breast- 
piece, and for the bottom of the robe of the ephod - a shimmer- 
ing blend of bright reds and blues with the metallic glint of 
threads of gold. Highlighting the fiery effect were the rings and 
the braided chains of gold, the radiant golden crown of the 
mitre, and the gleam of precious stones set in gold on the shoul- 
der straps of the ephod and the breastpiece. Artist could scarcely 
do more with an earthly palette in a cold medium to produce the 
effect of fiery light." 31 

Fiery light: that is exactly the impression given by the vision 
of Christ here. The whiteness of His head and hair (like the An- 
cient of Days in Dan. 7), "the flaming fire from His eyes (like 
the throne of Dan. 7 and the eyes of the Son of Man in Dan. 10), 
and His feet like bronze glowing in a furnace (the term for 
bronze may refer to an alloy of gold and silver; cf. Mai. 3:2-3) 
- all these combine to make the point of Christ's appearance in 
a flashing, brilliant blaze of glory: And His face was like the sun 
shining in its strength (v. 16). Compare with this Jesus Ben 
Sirach's striking description of the glory of the High Priest: 

How splendid he was with the people thronging around him, 

when he emerged from the curtained shrine, 
like the morning star among the clouds, 

like the moon at the full, 
like the sun shining on the Temple of the Most High, 

like the rainbow gleaming against brilliant clouds, 
like roses in the days of spring, 

like lilies by a freshet of water, 
like a sprig of frankincense in summertime, 

like fire and incense in the tenser 
like a vessel of beaten gold 

encrusted with every kind of precious stone, 
like an olive tree loaded with fruit, 

like a cypress soaring to the clouds; 



31. Kline, Images of the Spirit, p. 43. 

32. Note that white hair is glorious, in contrast to the "perpetual youth" 
culture of our age. 

74 



KING OF KINGS 1:16 

when he put on his splendid vestments, 

and clothed himself in glorious perfection, 
when he went up to the holy altar, 

and filled the sanctuary precincts with his grandeur; 
when he received the portions from the hands of the priests, 

himself standing by the altar hearth, 
surrounded by a crowd of his brothers, 

like a youthful cedar of Lebanon 
as though surrounded by the trunks of palm trees. 
(Ecclesiastics 50:5-12, Jerusalem Bible) 

Completing the glorious picture of Christ is the statement 
that His Voice was like the sound of rushing waters. St. John is 
identifying the voice of Christ with the sound of the Cloud - a 
sound which, throughout Scripture, resembles numerous earthly 
phenomena: wind, thunder, trumpets, armies, chariots, and 
waterfalls; 33 or perhaps we should say that all these earthly phe- 
nomena were created to resemble various facets of the Cloud . 3 " 
The conclusion should be obvious: The resurrected, transfig- 
ured Jesus is the incarnate Glory of God. 

16 In His right hand He held seven stars; St. John goes on 
more fully to interpret this in verse 20, but we should consider 
first the immediate impression this sight would give to St. John 
and his readers. The seven stars make up the open cluster of 
stars known as the Pleiades, poetically thought of in the ancient 
world as being bound together on a chain, like a necklace. The 
Pleiades, forming part of the constellation Taurus, are men- 
tioned in Job 9:5-9; 38:31-33; and Amos 5:8. The sun is with 
Taurus in Spring (Easter), and the Pleiades are thus a fitting 
symbol in connection with the coming of Christ: He holds the 
stars that announce the rebirth and flowering of the world. The 
other Biblical references make it clear that the One who holds 
the seven stars is the almighty Creator and Sustainer of the uni- 
verse. 

But there is another dimension to this imagery. The symbolic 
use of the seven stars was quite well known in the first century, 



33. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, p. 58; cf. Ex. 19:16, 19; Ezek. 1:24. 

34. See H erman Bavinck, The Doctrine of God (London: The Banner of 
Truth Trust, [1951] 1977), pp. 88ff. 

75 



1:17-18 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

for the seven stars appeared regularly on the Emperor's coins as 
symbols of his supreme political sovereignty. At least some early 
readers of the Revelation must have gasped in amazement at St. 
John's audacity in stating that the seven stars were in Christ's 
hand. The Roman emperors had appropriated to themselves a 
symbol of dominion that the Bible reserves for God alone — 
and, St. John is saying, Jesus Christ has come to take it back. 
The seven stars, and with them all things in creation, belong to 
Him. Dominion resides in the right hand of the Lord Jesus 
Christ. 

Naturally there will be opposition to all this. But St. John 
makes it clear that Christ is on the offensive, coming forth to do 
battle in the cause of His crown rights: out of His mouth came a 
sharp two-edged sword, His Word that works to save and to 
destroy. The image here is taken from the prophecy of Isaiah: 
"He will strike the Land with the rod of His mouth, and with the 
breath of His lips He will slay the wicked" (Isa. 11:4). It is used 
again in Revelation to show Christ's attitude toward heretics: "I 
will make war against them with the sword of my mouth" (2:16); 
and yet again to show the Word of God conquering the nations 
(19:11-16). Not only is Christ in conflict with the nations, but He 
declares that He will be completely victorious over them, subdu- 
ing them by His bare Word, the sharp and powerful two-edged 
sword that comes from His mouth (Heb.4:12). 

St. John's Commission (1:17-20) 

17 And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as a dead man. And 
He laid His right hand upon me, saying, Do not be afraid; I 
am the first and the last, 

18 and the living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive 
forevermore, amen; and I have the keys of Death and of 
Hades. 

19 Write therefore the things you have seen, and what they are, 
and what things shall take place after these things. 

20 As for the mystery of the seven stars that you saw in My 
right hand, and the seven golden lampstands: the seven stars 
are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven lamp- 
stands are the seven churches. 

17-18 When he saw the Angel of the Lord, Daniel says, "I 
fell into a deep sleep with my face to the ground. Then behold, a 

76 



KING OF KINGS 1:17-18 

hand touched me and set me trembling on my hands and knees. 
. . . And when He had spoken this word to me, I stood up 
trembling" (Dan. 10:9-11). St. John's reaction to the sight of the 
glorified Lord is much the same; yet Christ tells him not to fear. 
While fear is a proper first reaction, it must be replaced. Ulti- 
mately, the awesome majesty of God is not a reason for terror in 
the Christian; rather, it is the ground of our confidence and sta- 
bility. The presence of Christ is, very properly, the occasion for 
unbelievers to faint away and hide, out of sheer fright (cf. 
6:15-17); but our Lord comes to St. John (as to us) in love, and 
sets him on his feet. The presence and activity of God in the 
Cloud was to the Egyptians a terrifying omen of their destruc- 
tion; but, for the covenant people, He was the Comforter and 
Savior. The same contrast is set out in Habakkuk 3:10-13: 

The mountains saw You and quaked. 
Torrents of water swept by; 
The deep uttered its voice, 
And lifted high its hands. 
Sun and moon stood still in the heavens; 
They went away at the light of Your arrows, 
At the radiance of Your gleaming spear. 
In wrath You strode through the earth 
And in anger You threshed the nations. 
You went forth to deliver Your people, 
For the salvation of Your anointed one. 
You crushed the head of the house of evil, 
You laid him open from thigh to neck. 

Jesus is God, the First and the Last, as the Lord says of 
Himself in Isa. 44:6: "I am the First and I am the Last, and there 
is no God besides Me" (cf. Isa. 48:12). Appropriating another 
Old Testament title for God, J esus declares that He is the living 
One (cf. Deut. 5:26; Josh. 3:10; Ps. 42:2; Jer. 10:10): He is self- 
existent, independent, the All-Controller - and He, "having 
been raised from the dead, is never to die again; death is no 
longer master over Him" (Rem. 6:9). St. John can be resur- 
rected in verse 17 because of the truth of verse 18, that Christ is 
alive forevermore. As the Risen Lord, Christ has the keys of 

77 



1:19 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

Death and of Hades. 35 The Empire claimed to have all author- 
ity, to possess the power over life and death, and over the grave; 
Jesus declares instead that He - and not the State, nor the em- 
peror, nor Satan, nor the ruler of the synagogue - has command 
over all reality. He is the Lord of life and death, of all history, 
and of eternity; and it is in terms of this complete dominion that 
He commissions St. John to write this book which so clearly and 
unequivocally sets forth the truth of His eternal and compre- 
hensive government. 

19 St. John's commission was interrupted by his falling into 
a dead faint; now that he has been "resurrected," he is again 
commanded: Write theref ore 36 the things you have seen, and 
what they are, and what things are about to take place after 
these things. Some interpreters read this as a threefold outline of 
the whole book: St. John writes about what he has seen (the vi- 
sion of Christ), then about the present (the churches, in chapters 
2-3), and finally about the future (chapters 4-22). Such a divi- 
sion is quite arbitrary, however; the Revelation (like all other 
Biblical prophecies) weaves past, present, and future together 
throughout the entire book. 

A more likely meaning of this statement is that St. John is to 
write what he has seen - the vision of Christ among the lamp- 
stands holding the stars — and what they are, i.e., what they sig- 
nify or correspond to. The word are (Greek eisin) is most often 
used in Revelation in this sense (1:20;4:5;5:6, 8; 7:13-14;11:4; 
14:4; 16:14; 17:9, 10, 12, 15). Thus verse 20 goes on to do just 
that, explaining the symbolism of "the things you have seen" 
(the stars and lampstands). St. John is then commissioned to 
write the things that are about to happen, or (as he told us in 



35. Adam originally held the Key of Death and Hades, for he was the Priest 
of Eden, with the priestly responsibility of guarding the Gate of Paradise 
(Gen. 2:15; see Meredith G. Kline, Kingdom Prologue (privately published syl- 
labus, 1981), Vol. I, pp. 127fF. When he abdicated that responsibility, he him- 
self was turned out into death, away from the Tree of Life, and the cherubim 
took his place as guardians, holding theflaming sword (the key). By the Resur- 
rection, J esus Christ as the Second Adam returned to Paradise as Priest, the 
guardian of Eden's Gate, to cast the Serpent into Death and Hades (cf. Rev. 
20:1-3). 

36. The therefore shows the connection with St. J ohn's original commission 
in v. 11. 

78 



KING OF KINGS 1:19 

verse 1) "the things that must shortly take place." It appears that 
the phrasing is intended to provide a parallel to the description 
of the One "who was and who is and who is coming": Thus "the 
process of temporal history reflects the eternal nature of God." 37 
We might pause at this point to consider an error that is 
common among those who adopt a preterist interpretation of 
Revelation. The two facts of St. John's symbolic style and his 
clearly anti-statist content have led some to believe that the pol- 
itically sensitive message determined the use of symbolism - that 
St. John wrote the Revelation in a secret code in order to hide 
his message from the imperial bureaucrats. This is the view of 
James Kallas (who, incidentally, also holds that John wrote in 
the time of the emperor Domitian, rather than Nero): 

He writes in deliberately disguised language. He resorts to 
imagery the Remans will not understand. He cannot write in a 
literal and obvious way. He cannot say in clear and unambig- 
uous terms what lies closest to his heart. What would happen if 
he wrote what he believed, that Domitian was a blasphemous 
son of the devil himself? What would happen if he cried out that 
the Roman empire, in its demand that men bow down and wor- 
ship Caesar, was a diabolical scheme of Satan himself designed 
to win men away from Jesus? The letter would never be deliv- 
ered. It would never clear the censors. 

And thus he must camouflage and conceal his true meaning. 
He must resort to non-literal symbolism, to obscure and appar- 
ently meaningless references which his Roman censors would see 
merely as the senile musings of a mad old man, 38 

There may be some truth to this, as a tangential slant on the 
use of the number 666 in 13:18 in reference to Nero (not Domi- 
tian) - a "code" that the Remans would be unable to decipher 
correctly. But even without that reference, the Book of Revela- 
tion is a clearly treasonous document, and any State bureaucrat 
would have been able to figure that out. Consider what we have 
seen already in St. John's description of Jesus Christ: The mere 
assertion that He is Ruler of the kings of the earth is an assault 



37. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation, p. 95. 

38. J ames Kallas, Revelation: God and Satan in the Apocalypse (Min- 
neapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1973), pp. 58f. 

79 



1:20 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

on the emperor's autonomy. The very first chapter of Revelation 
is actionable, and the symbolism does not obscure that fact in 
the slightest. The reason for the use of symbolism is that the 
Revelation is a prophecy, and symbolism is prophetic language. 
We must remember too that the Roman government knew very 
well who St. John was. He was not "a mad old man" who had 
been exiled for mere "senile musings." He was an Apostle of the 
Lord Jesus Christ, under the imperial ban on account of the 
Word of God and the Testimony of Jesus (1:9). 

20 Jesus explains to St. John the mystery of the seven stars 
and of the seven golden lampstands. Here, too, it is important to 
stress that these are not code-names. Biblical symbolism doesn't 
work that way. Instead, Biblical symbolism sets things in relation- 
ship to each other; it builds associations in our minds, and asks us 
to see objects from this perspective. These statements about the 
stars and lampstands are not "definitions: but state different 
ways of looking at the angels and the churches. Michael Wilcock's 
comments help us understand this use of symbolism: "Avery cur- 
sory study of the New Testament use of the word 'mystery' shows 
that it does not there carry its usual modern sense of 'puzzle.' It is 
indeed something hidden, but not in such a way that you can fol- 
low a series of clues and eventually find it out; rather, it is a truth 
which you either know or do not know, depending on whether or 
not it has been revealed to you." 39 Thus ' when Christ identities 
these things with each other, He is not saying "that one is a sym- 
bol while the other is what the symbol 'really' means. He is saying 
that here are two things which correspond to each other, being 
equally real from different points of vie w."4° In other words, "we 
have, not an explanation of a symbolic term by a real one, but a 
statement that these two terms, which are equally real, are sim- 
ply interchangeable. . . . John is not giving explanations, but 
equivalents. He is not concerned to tell us that 'lampstands,' 
which we do not understand, means 'church,' which we do. He 
is rather concerned to tell us things about the lampstands and 
the bride and the city and the church, the twenty-four elders and 
the 144,000 and the numberless multitude; their meaning we 



39. Wilcock, I Saw Heaven Opened, p. 153. 

40. Ibid., p. 154. 



80 



KING OF KINGS 1:20 

should know already from the rest of Scripture, and he merely 
reminds us in passing that all of these correspond to one another 
and are different descriptions of the same thing. "4 ' 

The seven stars thus "correspond" to the angels of the seven 
churches. 42 Angels and stars are often linked up in the Bible (cf. 
Jud. 5:20; Job 38:7;Isa. 14:13; Jude 13; Rev. 8:10-12; 9:1; 12:4), 
and here the "angels" of the churches are associated with the 
constellation of the Pleiades (see comments on v. 16). In addition 
— and this is one of those things that, as Wilcock pointed out 
above, "we should know already from the rest of Scripture" — 
both angels and stars are associated with government and rule 
(cf. Gen. 37:9; Jud. 5:20; Dan. 8:9-11; 10:13, 20-21). Now, when 
the Lord speaks to the seven churches in Chapters 2-3, He ad- 
dresses the angel of each church; clearly, Christ holds the angels 
of the churches responsible for the life and conduct of their re- 
spective churches. Then, in the later portions of the prophecy, 
we see seven angels pouring out judgments upon the rebellious 
earth (cf. Rev. 8-9, 16). These all are correspondences: The 
seven stars, the constellation of resurrection and dominion, are 
the angels, which correspond to the government of the Church. 

A further aspect of the Bible's angel-imagery which supports 
this interpretation concerns the relationship between angels and 
prophets. The chief mark of the Biblical prophet was that he 
had stood in the presence of God and the angels during the ses- 
sions of the heavenly Council (cf. Isa. 6:1-8; Ezek. 1-3, 10), 
thereby becoming its authoritative spokesman to God's people 
(cf. Jer. 15:19). The essential difference between the true prophet 
and the false prophet was that the true prophet had been taken 
up by the Spirit into the Cloud to take part in this assembly: 

Thus says the Lord of hosts: 

Do not listen to the words of the prophets who are prophesying 

to you. 
They are leading you into futility; 
They speak a vision of their own imagination, 



41. Ibid., p. 156. 

42. An interesting aspect of the conceptual background of all this is the 
reference in the apocryphal book of Tobit to 'the seven holy angels, who pres- 
ent the prayers of the saints, and who go in and out before the glory of the 
H oly One" (12:15; cf. 1 E noch 20:1-7). 

81 



1:20 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

Not from the mouth of the Lord. . . . 

But who has stood in the Council of the LoRD, 

That he should see and hear His Word? 

Who has given heed to His Word and listened? . . . 

I did not send these prophets, 

But they ran. 

I did not speak to them, 

But they prophesied. 

But if they had stood in My Council, 

Then they would have announced My words to My people, 

And would have turned them back from their evil way 

And from the evil of their deeds. (Jer. 23:16-22) 

The prophets not only observed the deliberations of the 
heavenly Council (cf. 1 Kings 22:19-22); they actually partici- 
pated in them. Indeed, the Lord did nothing without consulting 
His prophets (Amos 3:7). This is why the characteristic activity 
of the Biblical prophet is intercession and mediation (cf. Gen. 
18:16-33; 20:7, the first occurrence of the word prophet in Scrip- 
ture). As members of the Council the prophets have freedom of 
speech with God, and are able to argue with Him, often per- 
suading Him to change His mind (cf. Ex. 32:7-14; Amos 7:1-6). 
They are His friends, and so He speaks openly with them (Gen. 
18:17; Ex. 33:11; 2 Chron. 20:7; Isa. 41:8; John 15:15). As images 
of fully redeemed Man, the prophets shared in God's glory, ex- 
ercising dominion over the nations (cf. Jer. 1:10; 28:8), having 
been transfigured ethically (cf. Isa. 6:5-8) and physically (cf. Ex. 
34:29). They thus resembled the angels of heaven, and so it is 
not surprising that the term angel (Heb. mal'ak, Greek angelos) 
is used to describe the Biblical prophet (cf. 2 Chron. 36:15-16; 
Hag. 1:13; Mai. 3:1; Matt. 11:10; 24:31; Luke 7:24;9:52). In fact, 
the archetypical Prophet in Scripture is the Angel of the Lord. 43 

There is therefore abundant Biblical precedent for the pro- 
phetic rulers of the churches to be referred to as the angels of 
the churches. It is likely that each angel represents a single pas- 
tor or bishop; but St. John could be referring to the stars/ 
angels simply as personifications of the government of each 



43. The most comprehensive study of the prophetic order and its relation- 
ship to the angelic Council is in Kline, Images of the Spirit, pp. 57-96. See also 
George Vandervelde, 'The Gift of Prophecy and the Prophetic Church" (Tor- 
onto: Institute for Christian Studies, 1984). 

82 



KING OF KINGS 1:20 

church as a whole. And the Lord of heaven and earth is holding 
them in His right hand. (This is the same hand that Christ used 
to resurrect St. John in v. 17; St. John is thus an "angel.") In a 
more general sense, what is true of the angels is true of the 
Church as a whole: St. Paul urged the Philippians to prove 
themselves to be "blameless and innocent, children of God 
above reproach in the midst of a crooked and perverse genera- 
tion, among whom you shine as lights [luminaries, stars] in the 
world" (Phil. 2:15). 

The seven lampstands are (correspond to) the seven churches; 
and the seven churches are, as we have noted already, both the 
particular churches referred to and the fullness of the whole 
Church in every age. In terms of the symbolism of the number 
seven as it relates to the Church, the comment of Victorious 
(a bishop martyred in a.d. 304) regarding the Apostle Paul is in- 
teresting: "In the whole world Paul taught that all the churches 
are arranged by sevens, that they are called seven, and that the 
Catholic Church is one. And first of all, indeed, that he himself 
also might maintain the type of seven churches, he did not 
exceed that number. But he wrote to the Remans, to the Cor- 
inthians, to the Galatians, to the Ephesians, to the Thessalon- 
ians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians; afterwards he wrote 
to individual persons, so as not to exceed the number of seven 
churches. "4 ' 

The one lampstand (a stylized tree) of the old Tabernacle is 
now Christ (the Tree of Life) with His seven lampstands. Be- 
fore, in the Old Testament, the Church had a centralized, na- 
tional character; and the unity of the particular congregations 
of Israel was focused geographically, in Jerusalem. But that is 
no longer the case. The Church, the New Israel, has been geo- 
graphically and nationally decentralized - or, better, multiczn- 
tralized: The Church is still a seven - still a unity - but what 
holds it together is not a special, holy piece of real estate; the 
unity of the Church is centered on Jesus Christ. The Church is 
no longer tied to one place, for it has been sent into all the world 



44. Victorious, Commentary on the Apocalypse of the Blessed John, in 
Alexander Roberts and J ames Donaldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers 
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, [1886] 1970), vol. VII, p. 345. 

83 



1:20 PART ONE: THE SON OF MAN 

to take dominion in the name of the universal King. 45 There is 
no longer any special space on earth that is holy; rather, the 
whole world has become "holy space," for Jesus Christ has re- 
deemed it. And in recapturing the world, He has recreated the 
Church in His image. For just as Christ is seen herein a blaze of 
glorious light, so the Church which He carries and upholds is 
characterized by light (cf. the description of the Church in 
21:9-22:5). The lightbearing churches, whose very governments 
glisten with starlike brilliance, shine upon the world with the 
light of Jesus Christ, with the result that men will see their good 
works and glorify their Father who is in heaven. 



45. According to Exodus 18 and Deuteronomy 1, the eldership was arranged 
hierarchically, with "rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, 
and rulers of tens. "This was the Biblical basis for the hierarchical organization 
of the early church, the bishop of the city corresponding to the "ruler over 
thousands" (see J ames B. J ordan, "Biblical Church Government, Part 3: 
Councilar Hierarchy- Elders and Bishops," Presbyterian Heritage, No. 9 
[January 1986] P.O.Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713). A central headquarters (a 
"Vatican'') may therefore be useful for Church government, although it is not 
necessary (there is a distinction between what may be good for Vnewell-being 
[beneesse] or the fulness of being [pleneesse] of the Church, and what is nec- 
essary for the being [esse] of the Church). The best available historical study of 
theriseof the episcopate is J . B. Lightfoot, The Christian Ministry, Philip 
Edgcumbe H ughes, ed. (Wilton, CT Morehouse-Barlc w Co., 1983). 



Part Two 

HISTORICAL PROLOGUE THE 
LETTERS TO THE SEVEN CHURCHES 

(Revelation 2-3) 

Introduction 

The second part of the covenantal treaty structure (cf. Deut. 
l:6-4:49y is the Prologue, which recounts the history of the 
Great King's relationship with the vassal, reminding him of his 
lord's authority and covenant faithfulness, listing the benefits 
that have been provided, enumerating the vassal's transgressions 
of the law, commanding the vassal to repent and renew his obe- 
dience, and promising future rewards. An important aspect of 
the Prologue is the covenant grant, 2 the command to take pos- 
session over the land, conquering it in the name of the Great 
King (cf. Deut.2:24-25,31; 3:18-22; 4:1, 14, 37-40). 3 

The Seven Messages to the churches correspond to the Cove- 
nant Prologue in several ways. Their structure follows the same 
general pattern: Christ's lordship over the Church, the individ- 
ual church's record of faithfulness or disobedience, warnings of 
punishment, and promises of blessings in response to obe- 
dience. Moreover, in each case the church is given a covenant 
grant, a commission to conquer, to overcome and exercise do- 
minion under Christ's lordship (2:7, 11, 17, 26-29; 3:5, 12, 21). 

In addition, each message itself recapitulates the entire 
five-part covenant structure. Consider the first message, to the 
church in Ephesus (2:1-7): 



1. See Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Struc- 
ture of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
1963), pp. 52-61. 

2. See Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion by Covenant, 
Ciyier,TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

3. Kline, Treaty of the Great King, pp. 56ff. 

85 



PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

1. Preamble: "The One who holds the seven stars in His 
right hand, the One who walks among the seven golden lamp- 
stands" (2:1) 

2. Historical Prologue: "I know your deeds. . . ." (2:2-4). 

3. Ethical Stipulations: "Remember therefore from where 
you have fallen, and repent, and do the deeds you did at first" 
(2:5a). 

4. Sanctions: "Or else I am coming to you, and will remove 
your lampstand out of its place-unless you repent" (2:5 b). 

5. Succession Arrangements: ". . . To him who overcomes, 
I will grant to eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the Paradise of 
My God" (2:6-7). 

Recapitulation of Covenantal History 

We discussed under 1:4 the view (strangely common among 
modern "literalists"!) that the seven churches symbolically rep- 
resent "seven ages of Church history"; and, while on several 
counts that interpretation is patently erroneous, there is another 
sense in which these seven churches are related to seven periods 
of Church history — Old Testament Church history. For the im- 
agery used to describe the seven cnurches of Asia progresses 
chronologically from the Garden of Eden to the situation in the 
first century a,d.: 

1. Ephesus (2:1-7). The language of Paradise is evident 
throughout the passage. Christ announces Himself as the Crea- 
tor, the One who holds the seven stars; and as the One who 
walks among the lampstands to evaluate them, as God walked 
through the Garden in judgment (Gen. 3:8). The "angel" of 
Ephesus is commended for properly guarding the church against 
her enemies, as Adam had been commanded to guard the Gar- 
den and his wife from their Enemy (Gen. 2:15). But the angel, 
like Adam, has "fallen," having left his first love. Christ there- 
fore threatens to come to him in judgment and remove his lamp- 
stand out of its place, as He had banished Adam and Eve from 
the Garden (cf. Gen. 3:24). Nevertheless, Eden's gate is open to 
those who gain victory over the Tempter: "To him who over- 
comes, I will grant to eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the 
Paradise of My God." 

2. Smyrna (2:8-11). The situation of the Patriarchs (Abra- 
ham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph) and of the children of Israel in 

86 



INTRODUCTION TO PART TWO 

Egypt appears to be reflected in the words of this message. 
Christ describes Himself as He "who was dead, and has come to 
life," a redemptive act foreshadowed in the lives of Isaac (Gen. 
22:1-14; Heb. 11:17-19) and Joseph (Gen. 37:18-36; 39:20- 41:45; 
45:4-8; 50:20), as well as in the salvation of Israel from the 
house of bondage. The Smyrnaeans' condition of seeming pov- 
erty and actual riches is analogous to the experience of all the 
patriarchs, who "lived as aliens in the land of promise" (Heb. 
1 1 :9). False "Jews" are persecuting the true heirs of the prom- 
ises, just as Ishmael persecuted Isaac (Gen. 21:9; cf. Gal. 
4:22-31). The danger of imprisonment at the instigation of a 
slanderer is paralleled in the life of Joseph (Gen. 39:13-20), as is 
the blessing of the crown of life for the faithful (Gen. 41:40- 44); 
Aaron too, as the glorious image of Man fully redeemed, wore a 
crown of life (Ex. 28:36-38). The "tribulation of ten days" fol- 
lowed by victory reflects the story of Israel's endurance through 
the ten plagues before its deliverance. 

3. Pergamum (2:12-17). The imagery in this section is taken 
from the sojourn of Israel in the wilderness, the abode of 
demons (Lev. 16:10; 17:7; Deut. 8:15; Matt. 4:1; 12:43); the 
Christians of Pergamum also had to dwell "where Satan's 
throne is . . . where Satan dwells." The enemies of the church 
are described as "Balaam" and "Balak," the false prophet and 
evil king who tried to destroy the Israelites by tempting them to 
idolatry and fornication (Num. 25:1-3; 31:16). Like the Angel of 
the Lord and Phineas the priest, Christ threatens to make war 
against the Balaamites with the sword (cf. Num. 22:31; 24:7-8). 
To those who overcome, He promises a share in the "hidden 
manna" from the Ark of the Covenant (Heb. 9:4), and a white 
stone with a "new name" inscribed on it, the emblem of the re- 
deemed covenant people worn by the High Priest (Ex. 28:9-12). 

4. Thyatira (2:18-29). St. John now turns to imagery from 
the period of the Israelite monarchy and the Davidic covenant. 
Christ announces Himself as "the Son of God," the greater 
David (cf. Ps. 2:7; 89:19-37; Jer. 30:9; Ezek. 34:23-24; 37:24-28; 
Hos. 3:5; Acts 2:24-36; 13:22-23). He rebukes the angel ,of 
Thyatira, whose toleration of his "wife, Jezebel," is leading to 
the apostasy of God's people (cf. 1 Kings 16:29-34; 21:25-26). 
She and those who commit adultery with her (cf. 2 Kings 9:22) 
are threatened with "tribulation," like the three and one-half 

87 



PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

years of tribulation visited upon Israel in Jezebel's day (1 Kings 
17:1; James 5:17); she and her offspring will be killed (cf. 2 Kings 
9:22-37). But he who overcomes will be granted, like David, 
"authority over the nations" (cf. 2 Sam. 7:19; 8:1-14; Ps. 
18:37-50; 89:27-29). The concluding promise alludes to David's 
Messianic psalm of dominion: "And he shall rule them with a 
rod of iron; like the vessels of a potter they shall be broken to 
pieces, as I also have received from My Father" (cf. Ps. 2:9). 

5. Sardis (3 :l-6). The imagery of this section comes from the 
later prophetic period (cf. the references to the Spirit and the 
"seven stars," speaking of the prophetic witness) leading up to 
the end of the monarchy, when the disobedient covenant people 
were defeated and taken into captivity. The description of the 
church's reputation for "life" when it is really "dead," the exhor- 
tations to "wake up" and to "strengthen the things that remain," 
the acknowledgement that there are "a few people" who have re- 
mained faithful, all are reminiscent of prophetic language about 
the Remnant in a time of apostasy (Isa. 1:5-23; 6:9-13; 65:8-16; 
Jer. 7:1-7; 8:11-12; Ezek. 37:1-14), as is the warning of imminent 
judgment (Isa. 1:24-31; 2:12-21; 26:20-21; Jer. 4:5-31; 7:12-15; 
11:9-13; Mic. 1:2-7; Zeph. 1). 

6. Philadelphia (3:7-13). The Return from the Exile under 
Ezra and Nehemiah is reflected in this message, which speaks in 
the imagery of the synagogue and the rebuilding of Jerusalem 
and the Temple (cf. the prophecies of Haggai, Zechariah, and 
Malachi). The Philadelphians, like the returning Jews, have "a 
little power." The reference to "the synagogue of Satan, who say 
that they are Jews, and are not" recalls the conflicts with "false 
Jews" in Ezra 4 and Nehemiah 4, 6, and 13. The warning of a 
coming "hour of testing . . . which is about to come on the 
whole world, to test those who dwell upon the Land" reminds us 
of the tribulation suffered under Antiochus Epiphanes (cf. Dan. 
8 and 11). But Christ promises the overcomer that he will be 
made "a pillar in the Temple" and share in the blessings of the 
"New Jerusalem." 

7. Laodicea (3:14-22). The period of the Last Days (a.d. 
30-70) provides the motifs for the seventh and last message. The 
"lukewarm" church, boasting of its wealth and self-sufficiency 
yet blind to its actual poverty and nakedness, is a fitting image 
of the Pharisaical Judaism of the first century (Luke 18:9-14; cf, 

88 



INTRODUCTION TO PART TWO 

Rev. 18:7). Warned that she is about to be spewed out of the 
Land (the curse of Lev. 18:24-28; cf. Luke 21:24), Israelis urged 
to repent and accept Christ, offered in the Eucharistic meal. 
Those who overcome are granted the characteristic blessing of 
the age brought in by the New Covenant: dominion with Christ 
(cf. Eph. 1:20-22; 2:6; Rev. 1:6). 

The Structure of Revelation Foreshadowed 

Finally, the messages to the seven churches also contain a 
miniature outline of the entire prophecy. As we have noted, the 
four sections of Revelation following the Preamble (Chapter 1) 
are structured in terms of the four sevenfold curses of the Cove- 
nant, set forth in Leviticus 26:18, 21, 24, 28. These four sets of 
judgments in Revelation may be summarized as follows: 

1. Judgment on the False Apostles (2-3). Heretical teachers 
propagating false doctrines are exposed, condemned, and ex- 
communicated by St. John and those who are faithful to the true 
Apostolic tradition. 

2. Judgment on the False Israel (4-7). Apostate Israel, which 
is persecuting the saints, is condemned and punished; the believ- 
ing Remnant is protected from judgment, inherits the blessings 
of the Covenant, and fills the earth with fruit. 

3 . Judgment on the Evil King and False Prophet (8-14). The 
Beast and the False Prophet wage war against the Church and 
are defeated by the True King and His army of faithful witnes- 
ses. 

4. Judgment on the Royal Harlot (15-22). Babylon, the False 
Bride, is condemned and burned, and the True Bride celebrates 
the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. 

This is the same general pattern we find in the first four mes- 
sages themselves: 

1. Ephesus: Judgment on the Fake Apostles (2:1-7). The 

conflicts of all seven churches are evident in the struggles of this 
church against the Nicolaitans, "those who call themselves apos- 
tles but are not." 

2. Smyrna: Judgment on the False Israel (2:8-11). The 
Smyrnaeans are suffering from the opposition of "those who say 
they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan." 

89 



part TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

3. Pergamum: Judgment on the Evil King and False 
Prophet (2:12-17). This church is experiencing persecution and 
temptation from the first-century counterparts of "Balak,"the 
evil king of Moab, and the false prophet "Balaam." 

4. Thyatira: Judgment on the Royal Harlot (2:18-29). The 
leader of the heretics, who entices God's servants into idolatry 
and fornication, is named after Jezebel, the adulterous queen of 
ancient Israel. 

The cycle now begins over again, so that these first four mes- 
sages are "recapitulated" in the last three, but with attention to 
different details. To understand this, we must start from the first 
message again. St. John's descriptions of Christ in the preamble 
to each message are drawn from those in the vision of the Son of 
Man in Chapter 1 . But his order is chiastic (that is, he takes up 
each point in reverse order). Thus: 

The Vision of the Son of Man 

A. His eyes were like a flame of fire, and His feet were like burnished 

bronze (1:14-15). 

B. Out of His mouth came a sharp two-edged sword (1:16). 
C. I am the First and the Last, and the Living One; and I 
was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore, Amen; and 
I have the keys of death and of Hades (1:17-18). 

D. The mystery of the seven stars that you saw in My 
right hand, and the seven golden lampstands (1:20). 
The Letters to the Seven Churches 

D. Ephesus The One who holds the seven stars in 
His right hand, the One who walks among the seven 
golden lampstands (2:1). 
C. Smyrna The First and the Last, who was dead, and has 
come to life (2:8). 
B. Pergamum The One who has the sharp two-edged sword 
(2:12). 
A. Thyatira The Son of God, who has eyes like a flame of fire, and 
His feet are like burnished bronze (2:18). 

D. Sardis He who has the seven Spirits of God, and 
the seven stars (3:1). 
C. Philadelphia He who is holy, who is true, who has the 
key of David, who opens and no one will shut, and who 
shuts and no one will open (3:7). 
C. Laodicea The Amen, the faithful and true Witness, the 

90 



PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 
Beginning of the creation of God O-.U)." 

The repetition of the overall pattern is reinforced by other 
points of similarity. The parallel between Smyrna and Philadel- 
phia can be seen also in that both deal with the "synagogue of 
Satan"; and the association of the "seven lampstands" of Eph- 
esus with the "seven Spirits of God" of Sardis is accounted for in 
the following chapter, during St. John's vision of the heavenly 
Throne: "And there were seven lamps of fire burning before the 
Throne, which are the seven Spirits of God" (4:5). 



4. We would have expected St. J ohn to pattern the Laodicean Preamble 
after B (or perhaps even A) rather than C; for some reason, he chose not to 

make the structure symmetrical. 

91 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO 
THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 



Ephesus: Judgment on the False Apostles (2:1-7) 

1 To the angel of the church in Ephesus write: The One who 
holds the seven stars in His right hand, the One who walks in 
the middle of the seven golden lampstands, says this: 

2 I know your deeds and your toil and your perseverance, and 
that you cannot endure evil men - that you have tested those 
who call themselves apostles but are not, and have found 
them to be false. 

1 And you have perseverance, and have endured hardships for 
My name, and have not grown weary. 

4 But I have this against you: You have left your first love. 

5 Remember therefore from where you have fallen, and re- 
pent and do the deeds you did at first; or else I am coming to 
you quickly, and will remove your lampstand out of its place 
— unless you repent. 

6 Yet this you do have: You hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans, 
which I also hate. 

7 He whb has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. To him who overcomes, I will grant to eat of the 
Tree of Life, which is in the Paradise of My God. 

1 The city of Ephesus was the most important city in Asia 
Minor, both in politics and trade. It was an important cultural 
center as well, boasting such attractions as art, science, witch- 
craft, idolatry, gladiators, and persecution. Main Street ran 
from the harbor to the theater, and on the way the visitor would 
pass the gymnasium and public baths, the public library, and the 
public brothel. Its temple to Artemis (or Diana - the goddess of 
fertility and "nature in the wild") was one of the Seven Wonders 
of the ancient world. St. Luke tells us another interesting fact 
about the city, one that has important bearing on the Seven 

93 



2:2-3 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

Messages as a whole: Ephesus was a hotbed of Jewish occultism 
and magical arts (Acts 19:13-15, 18-19). Throughout the world of 
the first century, apostate Judaism was accommodating itself to 
numerous pagan ideologies and heathen practices, developing 
early strains of what later came to be known as Gnosticism — 
various hybrids of occult wisdom, rabbinical lore, mystery reli- 
gion, and either asceticism or licentiousness (or both), all stirred 
up together with a few bits and pieces of Christian doctrine. 1 
This mongrelized religious quackery was undoubtedly a primary 
spawning ground for the heresies that afflicted the churches of 
Asia Minor. 

Yet, despite all the multiform depravity within Ephesus (cf. 
Eph. 4:17-19; 5:3-12) the Lord Jesus Christ had established His 
Church there (Acts 19); and in this message He assures the angel 
of the congregation that He holds the seven stars in His right 
hand, upholding and protecting the rulers whom He has or- 
dained: "He fills them with light and influence," says Matthew 
Henry's Commentary, - "He supports them, or else they would 
soon be falling stars." 2 He also walks in the middle of the lamp- 
stands, the churches, guarding and examining them, and con- 
necting them to one another through their unity in Him. "I will 
put My dwelling place among you, and I will not abhor you. I 
will walk among you and be your God, and you will be my peo- 
ple" (Lev. 26:11-12). 

2-3 The church in Ephesus was well known for its toil and 
hard work for the faith, and its perseverance in the face of op- 
position and apostasy, having endured hardships for the name 
of Christ. This was a church that did not know the meaning of 
compromise, willing to take a strong stand for orthodoxy, re- 
gardless of the cost. (It is noteworthy that, of all Paul's letters to 
the churches, Ephesians alone does not mention a single doc- 
trinal issue that needed apostolic correction.) The rulers of the 



1. See Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza, The Book of Revelation: Justice and 
Judgment (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), pp. 114-32. For an example of 
the sort of insane literature this movement produced, see J ames M. Robinson, 
ed., The Nag Hammadi Library (San Francisco: Harper & Row, Publishers, 
1977). 

2. Matthew Henry, Commentary on the Whole Bible (New York: Fleming 
H . Revell Co., n.d.), vol. VI , p. 1123. 

94 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:4-6 

church were not afraid to discipline evil men. They knew the im- 
portance of heresy trials and excommunications, and it seems 
that this church had had a good share of both: Its rulers had 
tested the false "apostles," and had convicted them. The elders 
of Ephesus heeded well the exhortation Paul had given them 
(Acts 20:28-31): "Guard yourselves and all the flock of which the 
Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of the Church 
of God, which He bought with His own blood. I know that after 
I leave, savage wolves will come in among you and will not spare 
the flock. Even from your own number men will arise and dis- 
tort the truth in order to draw away disciples after them. So be 
on your guard!" 

Forty years later, this church was still renowned for its or- 
thodoxy, as St. Ignatius (martyred a.d. 107) observed in his let- 
ter to the Ephesians: "You all live according to truth, and no 
heresy has a home among you: indeed, you do not so much as 
listen to anyone, if he speaks of anything except concerning 
Jesus Christ in truth. ... I have learned that certain persons 
passed through you bringing evil doctrine; and you did not 
allow them to sow seeds among you, for you stopped up your 
ears, so that you might not receive the seed sown by them. . . . 
You are arrayed from head to foot in the commandments of 
Jesus Christ." 3 

There are several striking parallels in these verses: Christ tells 
the church, "I know . . . your toil [literally, weariness] and your 
perseverance, and that you cannot endure evil men. . . . And 
you have perseverance and have endured for My sake, and have 
not grown weary." 

4-6 Yet the Lord rebukes the angel: I have this against you: 
You have left your first love. The church's desire for sound doc- 
trine had become perverted into a hardening-up against their 
brothers in Christ, so that they lacked love. It is important to 
note that even the most rigorous concern for orthodoxy does 
not automatically mean an absence of love. It is only a perver- 
sion of orthodoxy that results in hardness toward brethren. 
Christ does not criticize the Ephesians for being "too orthodox," 
but for leaving, forsaking the love which they had at first. The 



3. St. Ignatius, Ephesians vi, ix. 

95 



2:4-6 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

question of "doctrine versus love" is, Biblically speaking, a non- 
issue. In fact, it is a specifically pagan issue, seeking to put 
asunder what God has joined together. Christians are required 
to be both orthodox and loving, and a lack of either will even- 
tually result in the judgment of God. 

Remember therefore from where you have fallen: The Ephe- 
sians had once had a harmonious combination of love and doc- 
trinal orthodoxy, and Christ calls them to repent, to change 
their minds about their actions and do the deeds you did at first. 
Love is not simply a state of mind or an attitude; love is action 
in terms of God's law: "By this we know that we love the chil- 
dren of God, when we love God and keep His commandments. 
For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; 
and His commandments are not burdensome" (1 John 5:2-3; cf. 
Rem. 13:8-10). Christ's antidote for the Bride's spiritual malaise 
is not simply an exhortation to change her attitude as such. In- 
stead, He commands her to change her actions, to perform the 
works that had characterized her romance with the Bridegroom 
at the beginning. Repentant actions will nourish and cultivate a 
repentant attitude. 

If they do not repent, however, Christ warns: I am coming to 
you in judgment - a warning stated three more times in these 
letters (2:16; 3:3, 11). As we have seen before (1:7), the Coming 
of Christ does not simply refer to a cataclysm at the end of his- 
tory, but rather refers to His comings in history. In fact, He 
warns, He will come quickly, a term emphasized by its seven oc- 
currences in Revelation (2:5, 16; 3:11; 11:14;22:7, 12, 20). The 
Lord is not threatening the church at Ephesus with His Second 
Coming; He is saying that He will come against them: I will re- 
move your lampstand out of its place. Their influence will be 
taken away, and, indeed, they will cease to be a church at all. 
For lack of love, the entire congregation is in danger of excom- 
munication. If the elders of a church fail to discipline and disci- 
ple the church toward love as well as doctrinal orthodoxy, Jesus 
Christ Himself will step in and administer judgment - and at 
that point it may very well be too late for repentance. 

It is likely that St. John was using an important "current 
event" in the life of Ephesus as a partial basis for this imagery. 
The coastline was continually changing because of the sediment 
brought down by the nearby river Cayster; sand and pebbles 

96 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:4-6 

progressively filled up the harbor, threatening to turn it into a 
marsh. The city was in danger of being, in effect, moved out of 
its place, completely cut off from the sea. Two centuries before, 
a massive engineering project had dredged the harbor, at the 
cost of much toil, perseverance, and hardship. By the middle of 
the first century, however, the harbor was again filling with silt. 
It became apparent that if Ephesus was to retain her influence as 
a seaport, the citizens would have to repent of their negligence 
and do the first works again. In a.d. 64, the city finally began 
dredging the harbor, and Ephesus remained in its place for years 
to come. (Over later centuries, the silting was allowed to go on 
unimpeded. Now, the sea is six miles away from the ruins of 
Ephesus, and what was once the harbor of Ephesus is now a 
grassy, windswept plain.) 4 

But a return to love does not imply any lessening of theolog- 
ical standards (in a real sense, it means a heightening and en- 
forcing of a full-orbed theological standard). True love for 
Christ and His people requires the hatred of evil, and the Lord 
commends them for their steadfastness in this: Yet this you do 
have: You hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I also hate. 
According to the second-century bishop St. Irenaeus, "the Nic- 
olaitans are the followers of that Nicolas who was one of the 
seven first ordained to the diaconate by the apostles [Acts 6:5]. 
They lead lives of unrestrained indulgence . . . teaching that it 
is a matter of indifference to practice adultery, and to eat things 
sacrificed to idols." 5 If St. Irenaeus is correct here — his view- 
point is certainly debatable - the deacon Nicolas (in Greek, 
Nikolaos) had apostatized and become a "false apostle," seeking 
to lead others into heresy and compromise with paganism. 

One thing is obvious: St. John is calling the heretical faction 



4. William J . McK night, The Apocalypse: A Reappearance, Vol. \:John to 
the Seven Churches (Boston: Hamilton Brothers, Publishers, 1927), pp. 81ff.; 
C. J . Hemer, "Seven Cities of Asia Minor," in R. K. Harrison, ed., Major 
Cities Of the Biblical World (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1985), p. 
236. 

5. St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, i.xxvi.3; in Alexander Roberts and J ames 
Donaldson, eds., The A nte-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, [1885], 
1973), p. 352. 

6. It is debatable on two counts: first, the question of whether the "Nicolas" 
of Ephesus was really the deacon of J erusalem: second, whether the "fornica- 
tion" and idolatrous feasting (v. 14, 20) are to be taken literally. 

97 



2:7 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

in Ephesus after someone named Nikolaos (even if we allow that 
St. Irenaeus was confused about his identity). His reason ap- 
pears to be based on linguistic considerations, for in Greek Nik- 
olaos means Conqueror of the people. Interestingly, in the third 
of the seven messages St. John mentions a group of heretics in 
Pergamum, whom he calls followers of "Balaam" (2:14). In 
Hebrew, Balaam means Conqueror of the people. St. John is 
making a play on words, linking the "Nicolaitans" of Ephesus 
with the "Balaamites" of Pergamum; in fact, he clearly tells us 
in 2:14-15 that their doctrines are the same. Just as Nikolaos and 
Balaam are linguistic equivalents of one another (cf. the same 
technique in 9:11), they are theological equivalents as well. The 
"Nicolaitans" and the "Balaamites" are participants in the same 
heretical cult. 

This conclusion is strengthened by a further connection. 
When we compare the actual teachings of the Nicolaitan/Balaam- 
ite heresy with those of the "Jezebel" faction in the church of 
Thyatira, mentioned in the fourth message (2:20), we find that 
their doctrines are identical to each other. There thus seems to 
be one particular heresy that is the focus of these messages to 
the churches during the Last Days, a heresy seeking to seduce 
God's people into idolatry and fornication. As St. Paul had 
foretold, wolves had arisen from within the Christian commun- 
ity attempting to devour the sheep, and it was the duty of the 
pastors/angels to be on guard against them, and to put them out 
of the Church. Jesus Christ declares that He hates the deeds of 
the Nicolaitans; His people are to show forth His image in lov- 
ing what He loves and hating what He hates (cf. Ps. 139:19-22). 

7 As in each of these messages, the letter to the church at 
Ephesus concludes by exhorting them to hear what the Spirit 
says to the churches. Although the messages are different, in 
terms of the needs of each congregation, the Spirit is really issu- 
ing one basic command: Overcome! The Greek verb is nikao, 
the same as the root of Nicolaitan; Christ is charging His church 
with the responsibility of overcoming those who seek to over- 
come her. One side or the other will be the victor in this battle. 
Satan's opposition to the churches will appear in various forms, 
and different churches (and different ages of the Church) will 
have different issues to face, different enemies to overcome. But 

98 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:7 

no matter what are the particular problems facing it, each 
church is under divine mandate to conquer and completely over- 
whelm its opposition. The duty of overcoming is not something 
reserved for a select few "super-Christians" who have "dedi- 
cated" themselves to God over and above the usual require- 
ments for Christians. All Christians are overcomes: Whatever 
is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory that 
has overcome the world — our faith (1 John 5:4). The Christians 
spoken of in Revelation overcame the devil "because of the 
blood of the Lamb and because of the Word of their testimony" 
(12:11). The question is not one of victory or defeat. The ques- 
tion is victory or treason. 

The Christian overcomes; and to him Christ grants the privi- 
lege to eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the Paradise of My 
God. This is not only an otherworldly hope. Although the full 
consummation of this promise is brought in at the end of his- 
tory, it is a present and increasing possession of the people of 
God, as they obey their Lord and take dominion over the earth. 
For the Tree of Life is Jesus Christ Himself, and to partake of 
the Tree is to possess the blessings and benefits of salvation. 7 In 
Christ, the overcoming Christian has Paradise Restored, in this 
life and forever. 

Smyrna: Judgment on the False Israel (2:8-11) 

8 And to the angel of the church in Smyrna write: The First 
and the Last, who was dead, and has come to life, says this: 

9 I know your works and your tribulation and your poverty 
(but you are rich), and the blasphemy by those who say they 
are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. 

10 Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Behold, the devil is 
about to cast some of you into prison, that you may be 
tested, and you will have tribulation ten days. Be faithful 
unto death, and I will give you the crown of life. 



7. The Cross has long been used in Christian art as a symbol for the Tree of 
Life. There is strong evidence, however, that Christ was actually crucified on a 
living tree (with his wrists nailed to the crosspiece he carried and his feet nailed to 
the trunk; cf. Acts 5:30;10:39; 13:29; Gal. 3:13; 1 Pet. 2:24). The symbol of the 
Cross is simply a stylized tree, and was often pictured in ancient churches and 
tombs with branches and leaves growing out of it. See Ernest L. Martin's fasci- 
nating and informative work, The Place of Christ's Crucifixion: Its Discovery 
and Significance (Pasadena: Foundation for Biblical Research, 1984), pp. 75-94. 

99 



2:8 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

1 1 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. He who overcomes shall not be hurt by the second 
death. 

8 There were two characteristics of Smyrna that meant 
severe problems for the church there. First, the people of the 
city were strongly devoted to the Emperor cult; and, second, 
Smyrna had a large population of Jews who were hostile to the 
Christian faith. To this faithful church, suffering mightily under 
the persecutions of these unbelievers, Jesus Christ announces 
Himself as the First and the Last, a name for God taken from 
Isaiah 44:6 and 48:12. It is obvious from the contexts of those 
verses that the expression identifies God as the supreme Lord 
and Determiner of history, the Planner and Controller of all 
reality. The Biblical doctrine of predestination, when rightly un- 
derstood, should not be a source of fear for the Christian; 
rather, it is a source of comfort and assurance. 

The opposite of the doctrine of predestination is not free- 
dom, but meaninglessness; if the smallest details of our lives are 
not part of the Plan of God, if they are not created facts with a 
divinely determined significance, then they can have no meaning 
at all. They cannot be "working together for good." But the 
Christian who understands the truth of God's sovereignty is as- 
sured thereby that nothing in his life is without meaning and 
purpose - that God has ordained all things for His glory and for 
our ultimate good. This means that even our sufferings are part 
of a consistent Plan; that when we are opposed, we need not 
fear that God has abandoned us. We can be secure in the knowl- 
edge that, since we have been "called according to His purpose" 
(Rom. 8:28), all things in our life area necessary aspect of that 
purpose. Martin Luther said: "It is, then, fundamentally neces- 
sary and wholesome for Christians to know that God foreknows 
nothing contingently, but that He foresees, purposes, and does 
all things according to His own immutable, eternal and infalli- 
ble will. . . . For the Christian's chief and only comfort in ad- 
versit y lies in knowing that God does not lie, but brings all 
things to pass immutably, and that His will cannot be resisted, 
altered or impeded." 8 



8. Martin Luther, The Bondage of the Will,) . I . Packer and O. R. J ohns- 
ton, trans. (Old Tappan, NJ : Fleming H. RevellCo., 1957), pp. 80, 84. 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:9-10 

Not only is Christ the First and the Last, but He was dead, 
and has come to life: He is completely victorious over death and 
the grave as the "first fruits" of all those who die in the Lord 
(lCor. 15:20-22), guaranteeing our resurrection as well, so that 
even "death is swallowed up in victory" (1 Cor. 15:54). Regard- 
less of the force and cruelty of their persecutors, the Christians 
in Smyrna cannot be defeated, either in this life or the next. 

9-10 But it was not easy to be a Christian in Smyrna. Cer- 
tainly, they didn't get "raptured" out of their tribulation; and 
this often meant poverty as well, because of their stand for the 
faith. Perhaps they were subjected to confiscation of their prop- 
erty (cf. Heb. 10:34) or vandalism; it is also likely that they were 
the objects of an economic boycott on account of their refusal 
to align themselves with either the pagan State-worshipers or the 
apostate Jews (cf. 13:16-17). Yet in their poverty, they were rich 
in the most basic and ultimate sense: regarded by the world "as 
poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, yet possessing 
all things" (2 Cor. 6:10). I know all about what you are endur- 
ing, their Lord assures them; He identifies with them in their 
sufferings, so much so that "in all their afflictions He is afflicted" 
(Isa. 63:9;cf. v. 2-3). As the Puritan theologian John Owen ob- 
served, all our persecutions "are His in the first place, ours only 
by participation" (cf. Col. 1:24).9 

And he knows all about the blasphemy of their persecutors 
as well - those who say they are Jews and are not. Here the Lord 
is explicit about the identity of the opposition faced by the early 
Church: Those who are otherwise known as Nicolaitans, the 
followers of the false apostles Balaam and Jezebel, are defined 
here as those who claim to be Jews, children of Abraham, but in 
reality are children of the devil. These are the Israelites who 
have rejected Christ and thus rejected the God of Abraham, 
Isaac, and Jacob. A popular myth holds that non-Christian 
Jews are true believers in the God of the Old Testament, and 
that they only need to "add" the New Testament to their other- 
wise adequate religion. But the New Testament itself is adamant 
on this point: Non-Christian Jews are not believers in God, but 



9. J ohn Owen, Works, 76 vols., William H. Goold, ed. (Edinburgh: The 
Banner of Truth Trust, [1850-53] 1965-68), Vol. 2, p. 145. 

101 



2:9-10 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

are covenant-breaking apostates. As Jesus said to those Jews 
who rejected Him: "If you are Abraham's children, do the deeds 
of Abraham. But as it is, you are seeking to kill Me. . . . You 
are doing the deeds of your father. ... If God were your 
Father, you would love Me. . . . You are of your father the 
devil, and you want to do the deeds of your father. He was a 
murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, 
because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks the Lie, he 
speaks from his own nature; for he is a liar, and the father of it" 
(John 8:39-44). The truth is that there is no such thing as an "or- 
thodox" Jew, unless he is a Christian; for if Jews believed the 
Old Testament, they would believe in Christ. If a man does not 
believe in Christ, he does not believe Moses either (John 5:46). 

St. Paul wrote: "He is not a Jew who is one outwardly; 
neither is circumcision that which is outward in the flesh. But he 
is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is that which is 
of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter; and his praise is not 
from men, but from God" (Rem. 2:28-29). For this reason, St. 
Paul was bold enough to use this language in warning the 
churches against the seductions of the apostate Jews: "Beware 
of the dogs, beware of the evil workers, beware of the false cir- 
cumcision; for we are the true circumcision, who worship in the 
Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in 
the flesh" (Phil. 3:2-3). The expression translated true circumci- 
se n is, in the Greek, simply circumcision, meaning a cutting 
around; the false circumcision is literally concision, meaning a 
cutting in pieces. The Jews' circumcision, the covenant sign in 
which they trusted, was in reality an emblem of their own spirit- 
ual mutilation and destruction, the sign that through their own 
rebellion they had inherited the covenant curses. The cutting 
away of the foreskin was always a mark of damnation. To the 
righteous, the ritual application of God's wrath signified that 
they would not undergo its terrible reality; to the disobedient, 
however, it was a foretaste of things to come, a certain sign of 
the utter destruction that lay ahead. 

Who then is the true Jew? Who belongs lo the true Israel? 
According to the clear teaching of the New Testament, the per- 
son (regardless of his ethnic heritage) who has been clothed with 
Jesus Christ is the inheritor of the promises to Abraham, and 
possesses the blessings of the Covenant (Rem. 11:11-24; Gal. 

102 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:9-10 

3:7-9, 26-29). But a congregation of apostates and persecutors is 
nothing more, our Lord says, than a synagogue of Satan. Satan 
means Accuser, and early Christian history is rife with examples 
of Satanic false witness by the Jews against the Christian 
Church (Acts 6:9-15; 13:10; 14:2-5; 17:5-8; 18:6, 12-13; 19:9; 
21:27-36; 24:1-9; 25:2-3, 7). This point is underscored by the 
statement that some of them would be cast into prison by the 
devil (meaning the Slanderer). 

Because the One who knows their sufferings is also the First 
and the Last, the All-Controller, He can give authoritative com- 
fort: Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Some of the 
Smyrnaean Christians would soon be cast into prison at the in- 
stigation of the Jews; but Christ assures them that this too is a 
part of the great cosmic conflict between Christ and Satan. The 
persecutions inflicted upon them by the J ews allied with the 
Roman Empire have their origin in the devil, in his hostility to 
the followers of Jesus Christ, in his frantic attempts to retain the 
shreds of his tattered kingdom. He is desperately waging a los- 
ing battle against the relentlessly marching hordes of a nation of 
kings and priests who are predestined to victory. 

And thus behind even the devil's attempts to overthrow us is 
the absolute decree of God. Satan inspired the Chaldeans to 
steal Job's flocks, and yet Job's righteous response was: "The 
Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name 
of the Lord" (Job 1:21). 10 So the divinely ordained purpose for 
the devil's wicked activity is that you may be tested: as Samuel 
Rutherford wrote, "the devil is but God's master fencer, to teach 
us to handle our weapons." u The trials of Christians are not or- 
dained ultimately by Satan, but by God; and the outcome is not 
destruction, but purity (cf. Job 23:10; 1 Pet. 4:12-19). The tribu- 
lation of the church at Smyrna would be fierce, but relatively 
short in duration: ten days. Daniel and his three friends had 
been tested for ten days, but they passed the test, and were pro- 
moted to high privilege (Dan. 1:11-21). Similarly, the Jewish per- 
secution of the church in Smyrna would be allowed to continue 
for only a short while longer, and then the church would be free: 



10. SeeJ ohn Calvin's comments on this passage in his Institutes of the 
Christian Religion, ii.jv,2, 

11. The Letters of Samuel Rutherford, Frank E . Gaebelein, ed. (Chicago: 
Moody Press, 1951), p. 219. 

103 



2:11 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

Ten days of tribulation in exchange for one thousand years of 
victory (20:4-6). Even so, the time of testing was to cost the lives 
of many in the church, and they are exhorted to be faithful until 
death, in order to win the crown of life. This is not a blessing re- 
served for some unusually consecrated class of Christians, for 
all Christians are to be faithful until death. The Bible simply 
does not know of any other kind of Christian. "If we endure, we 
shall also reign with Him; if we deny Him, He also will deny us" 
(2 Tim. 2:12). "You will be hated by all on account of My name," 
Jesus said; "but it is the one who has endured to the end who will 
be saved" (Matt. 10:22). The crown of life is salvation itself. 

11 The faithful Christian who overcomes opposition and 
temptation shall not be hurt by the Second Death. The fact that 
this was originally said to a first-century church helps us under- 
stand the meaning of another passage in this book. Revelation 
20:6 states that those who are not hurt by the "Second Death" are 
the same as those who partake of "the First Resurrection; and 
that they are priests and kings with Christ - a blessing St. John 
has already affirmed to be a present reality (1:6). Necessarily, 
therefore, the First Resurrection cannot refer to the physical res- 
urrection at the end of the world (1 Cor. 15:22-28). Rather, it must 
refer to what St. Paul clearly taught in his epistle to the Ephe- 
sians: "And you were dead in your trespasses and sins. . . . But 
God, being rich in mercy, . . . even when we were dead in our 
transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you 
have been saved), and raked us up with Him" (Eph.2:l, 4-6). The 
Christian, in every age, is a partaker in the First Resurrection to 
new life in Christ, having been cleansed from his (first) death in 
Adam. 12 He "has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, 
but has passed out of death into life" (John 5:24). 

Pergamum: Judgment on the False 
Prophet and Godless King (2:12-17) 

12 And to the angel of the church in Pergamum write: The One 
who has the sharp two-edged sword says this: 



12. Of course, there will also be a second resurrection (a physical one) at the 
end of history, but that is not mentioned in Rev. 20:6. See J ohn 5:24-29, where 
Christ discusses both resurrections. 

104 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:12 

13 I know your works, and where you dwell, where Satan's 
throne is; and you hold fast My name, and did not deny My 
faith, even in the days of Antipas, My faithful witness, who 
was killed among you, where Satan dwells. 

14 But I have a few things against you, because you have there 
some who hold the teaching of Balaam, who kept teaching 
Balak to put a stumbling block before the sons of Israel, to 
eat things sacrificed to idols, and to commit fornication. 

15 Thus you also have some who in the same way hold the 
teaching of the Nicolaitans. 

16 Repent therefore; or else I am coming to you quickly, and I 
will make war against them with the sword of My mouth. 

17 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. To him who overcomes, to him I will give of the 
hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, and a new 
name written on the stone which no one knows but he who 
receives it. 

12 Pergamum was another important Asian city, and played 
host to a number of popular false cults, the most prominent be- 
ing those of Zeus, Dionysos, Asklepios (the serpent-god who 
was officially designated Savior), and, most importantly, 
Caesar-worship. Pergamum boasted magnificent temples to the 
Caesars and to Rome, and "of all the seven cities, Pergamum 
was the one in which the church was most liable to clash with 
the imperial cult ." 13 

To this major center of deified statism, Christ announces 
Himself as the One who has the sharp two-edged sword. Rome 
claimed for itself the position of Creator and Definer of all: The 
Empire's power over life and death was absolute and final. But, 
whereas Rome asserted that its right of execution was original, 
the message of Christianity was that all power and authority 
outside the triune God was derivative - the various rulers and 
authorities are created, and receive their dominion from God 
(Rem. 13:1-4). It is Jesus Christ who wields all power in heaven 
and on earth (Matt. 28: 18), and the ultimate power of the sword 
belongs to Him. As the Sovereign Lord and Ruler of the kings 
of earth (1:5), He has laid down the law to the nations. If the 



13. Robert H. M ounce, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 
1977), p. 96. 

105 



2:13 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

rulers do not apply and enforce His commands throughout their 
divinely-ordained jurisdiction, He will bring his sharp sword 
down upon their necks. 14 

13 The believers of Pergamum are living where Satan's 
throne is (cf. comments at 1:4 on the centrality of the throne- 
theme in Revelation). Robert H. Mounce notes several of the 
suggestions as to the meaning of this expression (none of which 
must necessarily exclude the others): "Frequent mention is made 
of the great throne-like altar to Zeus which overlooked the city 
from the citadel. . . . Others take the phrase in reference to the 
cult of Asklepios, who was designated Savior and whose symbol 
was the serpent (this would obviously remind Christians of 
Satan; cf. 12:9; 20:2). ... As the traveler approached Perg- 
amum by the ancient road from the south, the actual shape of 
the city-hill would appear as a giant throne towering above the 
plain. The expression is best understood, however, in connec- 
tion with the prominence of Pergamum as the official cult center 
of emperor worship in Asia. ... It was here that Satan had es- 
tablished his official seat or chair of state. As Rome had become 
the center of Satan's activity in the West (cf. 13:2; 16:10), so 
Pergamum had become his 'throne' in the East." 15 

While this last designation - the throne as the seat of emperor- 
worship and deified statism — is a central aspect of the text's 
meaning, there is a much more basic dimension that is generally 
overlooked. Satan has already been identified in these messages 
as united to the synagogue, the unbelieving Jewish community 
that has abandoned the covenant in favor of a mythical religion. 
The foremost enemy of the Church, throughout the New Testa- 
ment, is apostate Judaism, whose representatives were contin- 
ually haling Christians before the Roman magistrate (Acts 
4:24-28; 12:1-3; 13:8; 14:5; 17:5-8; 18:12-13; 21:11; 24:1-9; 25:2-3, 



14. That this is true for all nations, and not just Old Testament Israel, can 
be seen by reading (for example) Psalm 2 and Daniel 4. Comprehensive discus- 
sions of God's law as it relates to nations and rulers are contained in J ames B. 
J ordan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: 
Institute for Christian Economics, 1984);RousasJ ohn Rushdoony, The Insti- 
tutes of Biblical Law (Nutley, NJ : The Craig Press, 1973); and Greg L. Bahn- 
sen, Theonomy in Christian Ethics (Phillipsburg, NJ : Presbyterian and Re- 
formed Publishing Co., second cd., 1984). 

15. Mounce, pp. 96f. 

106 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:14-16 

9, 24). As St. John will reveal in Chapters 12-13, Satan is the 
moving force behind the Jewish/Roman attempt to destroy the 
Church. 

The close relationship in Pergamum between organized Jud- 
aism and the imperial officials, combined with Christianity's op- 
position to statism and the worship of the creature, made it only 
natural that persecution and martyrdom would begin here, if 
anywhere in Asia. And on this account, Christ regards the 
church at Pergamum as faithful: They hold fast to His name — 
confessing Him alone as Savior, Mediator and Lord, proclaim- 
ing that His identity as the link between heaven and earth was 
absolutely unique. They did not deny the faith, even when bitter 
persecution came in the days of Antipas . . . who was killed 
among you, where Satan dwells. No one now knows who this 
Antipas was, but it is enough that Christ singles him out for spe- 
cial acknowledgment: My faithful witness, He calls him. By his 
very name — Against All — Antipas personifies the steadfastness 
of the Pergamene church in resisting persecution. 

14-16 Yet not all in the church were of the faithful character 
of Antipas; moreover, a threat that posed a danger to the integ- 
rity of the faith, even greater than the danger of persecution, is 
the sly, insidious working of heresy. St. John draws on the his- 
tory of the Church in the wilderness to illustrate his point: You 
have there some who hold the teaching of Balaam, whose name 
means, like Nikolaos, Conqueror (or Destroyer) of the people. 
When it was discovered that the people of God could not be 
defeated in open warfare (see Num. 22-24), the false prophet 
Balaam suggested another plan toBalak, the evil King of Moab. 
The only way to destroy Israel was through corruption. Thus 
Balaam kept teaching Balak (cf. Num. 31:16) to put a stumbling 
block before the sons of Israel, to eat things sacrificed to idols, 
and to commit fornication (cf. Num. 25). 16 Thus you also have 
some who in the same way - i.e., in imitation of Balaam - hold 
the teaching of the Nicolaitans: In other words, those who hold 
the teaching of Balaam and those who hold the teaching of the 
Nicolaitans (cf. 2:6) comprise the same group. The church in 
Pergamum was standing steadfastly for the faith when it came 



16. J osephus provides an expanded version of the story in his Antiquities of 
the Jews, iv,vi,6. 

107 



2:14-16 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

to outright persecution by an ungodly state - yet they were fall- 
ing prey to other forms of compromise with Satan. 

What exactly was the Nicolaitan doctrine? St. John de- 
scribes it in terms of the doctrine of Balaam, using his ancient 
error as a symbol of the contemporary heresy. Like Balaam, the 
false apostles attempt to destroy Christians by corrupting them, 
by enticing them to eat things sacrificed to idols, and to commit 
fornication. Both of these practices were commonplace in the 
pagan religious atmosphere of the day, and St. John's language 
seems to be drawn from the Jerusalem Council's instructions to 
Gentile converts: 

For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us to lay upon 
you no greater burden than these essentials: that you abstain 
from things sacrificed to idols and from blood and from things 
strangled and from fornication; if you keep yourselves free from 
such things, you will do well (Acts 15:28-29). 17 

In disobedience to the true apostolic Council, the false Nico- 
laitan apostles advocated antinomianism - the teaching that, 
perhaps through the sacrifice of Christ, Christians were "freed 
from the law," in a sense completely opposed to the Biblical 
teaching of sanctification. It was no longer a sin, in their ac- 
count, to commit idolatry and fornication; the believer was not 
under obligation to obey the law, but can live as he pleases 
(although they probably claimed, as antinomians do today, the 
"leading of the Spirit" as justification for their abominable prac- 
tices). 

There is, however, an important aspect of the imagery in- 
volved here that we should not overlook: The false apostles are 
seeking to seduce the Christians into idolatrous eating and for- 



17. 'Writing to Corinth some fifteen years after the council St. Paul had oc- 
casion to argue with Christians who regarded the eating of things sacrificed to 
idols as a thing indifferent; and though he does not take his stand on thej eru- 
salem decree, he opposes the practice on the ground that it gave offense to 
weak brethren (1 Cor. 8:4, 9-10), and also because of the connection which he 
regarded as existing between idol-worship and unclean spirits (1 Cor. 10:20: 
The things that the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to demons, and not to 
God; and Z do not want you to become sharers in demons); to partake of the 
table of unclean spirits' (1 Cor. 10:21) was inconsistent with participation in the 
Eucharist." Henry Barclay Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
Kregel Publications, [1911] 1977), pp. 37f. 

108 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CH URCH : OVERCOM E ! 2:17 

nication, and this is analogous to the serpent's seduction of Eve. 
Her eating of the forbidden tree was, in essence, idolatry; it is 
also spoken of by St. Paul in terms of fornication (2 Cor. 
11:2-3). But those who overcome the Nicolaitan enticements, St. 
J ohn says, will be granted access to the Tree of Life (2:7). Those 
who refuse to eat Balaam's food will eat manna from heaven, 
and will be included in the number of those whose names are 
written on the stone (2:17). 

If the church is to be blessed, however, the false teaching 
must not be permitted. Christ, speaking to the rulers of the 
church, orders them to repent. The offenders must be recognized 
in their true character as heretical apostates, who will cause the 
downfall of the church if they are not excommunicated. The 
church that fails to discipline its members will be destroyed - 
even an otherwise faithful and exemplary church such as that at 
Pergamum. The Lord threatens that if they do not repent, I am 
coming to you quickly, and I will make war against them with 
the sword of my mouth; the Angel of the Lord had met Balaam 
with a drawn sword (Num. 22:31), and a sword was used to kill 
him (Num. 31:8). As we have observed already (see on 1:7 and 
2:5), this warning of Christ's Comingis not a statement about 
the Second Coming of Christ at the end of history, but rather re- 
fers to a judgment within history. It is a judgment that was im- 
minent to the church in Pergamum, especially in light of the fact 
that judgment was about to be unleashed upon the whole world 
(3:10). The same principle has been repeated again and again 
throughout the history of Christianity. Wherever heretics are in- 
dulged by the people or by the leadership, the church is on the 
verge of being destroyed by the jealous wrath of Christ. 

17 The overcomer is promised three things. First, Christ will 
give him of the hidden manna (i.e., the manna hidden in the 
Ark, which is Christ: Ex. 16:33-34; Heb. 9:4) - a symbol taken 
from the supernatural gift of "angels' food" (Ps. 78:25), giving 
daily strength and sustenance to the people of God during the 
Exodus from Egypt. In essence, that is what Christ communi- 
cates to His Church at every moment. Definitively, we have been 
restored to Edenic provision for our needs, and that will be pro- 
gressively realized in history until the final consummation and 
fulfillment of all of God's plans and promises for His people. 

109 



2:17 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

Second, the Christian is promised a white stone. This has 
been seen variously as referring to a ticket to a feast, a token of 
acquittal (i. e., justification), or some such reflection of a com- 
mon practice of J ohn's day. While these interpretations do not 
need to be excluded, of course, there is a much more satisfac- 
tory way to look at this stone in terms of Biblical revelation. 
There is a white stone connected in the Bible with manna, and it 
is called bdellium (cf. Ex. 16:31 with Num. 11:7). 18 Moreover, 
this stone is connected with the Garden of Eden, and is intended 
to be a reminder of it (Gen. 2:12): Salvation is a New Creation, 
and restores God's people to Paradise. 

Third, the Christian is granted a new name, speaking of the 
new character and identity of those who belong to Christ. As 
always, God the Lord is the Definer, who has called us into being 
and wholly interpreted us in terms of his predetermined plan: 

The nations will see your righteousness, 

And all kings your glory; 

And you will be called by a new name, 

Which the mouth of the Lord will bestow. (Isa. 62:2) 

The fact that the name is written on the stone would seem to 
argue against the interpretation of the white stone given above, 
for we are never told in Scripture of any writing of names on the 
bdellium. Yet this only serves to confirm the interpretation. The 
stone which was marked with a name in the Old Testament was 
the onyx stone. Two onyx stones were placed on the shoulders 
of the High Priest, and on them were engraved the names of the 
tribes of Israel (Ex. 28:9-12). Yet the onyx stone was not a white 
stone - it was black. The explanation for this seems to be that 
the bdellium and onyx are simply combined in this imagery (a 
common device in Scripture) to create a new image that still re- 
tains the older associations. The connecting link here is the 
bdellium:itis associated in Genesis 2:12 with onyx, and in Num- 
bers 11:7 with manna. Together, they speak of the restoration of 
Eden in the blessings of salvation. 

One further point about this promise should be explained. 



18. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 33 f.; cf. Ruth V. Wright and Rob- 
ert L. Chadbourne, Gems and Minerals of the Bible (New Canaan, CT: Keats 
Publishing, 1970), pp. 16f. 

110 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CH URCH : OVERCOM E ! 2:17 

No one knows the new name, Christ says, but he who receives 
it. The meaning of this expression, rooted in a Hebrew idiom, is 
that the name is "known" by the receiver in the sense of owning 
it. In other words, the point is not that the new name is secret, 
but that it is exclusive: Only the overcomer possesses the name, 
the divinely-ordained definition of himself as belonging to the 
covenant of the Lord J esus Christ; no one else has the right to 
it. 2 9 I n its particular application to the situation at Pergamum, 
the Nicolaitan heretic, who by his doctrine or life is a traitor to 
the cause of Christ, does not truly own the designation Chris- 
tian. The name belongs only to the overcomes. They, and they 
alone, are granted readmittance to the Garden. They gain en- 
trance through the sacrifice of Christ, in whom they have been 
redefined and renamed. 

Thyatira: Judgment on the Royal Harlot (2:18-29) 

18 And to the angel of the church of Thyatira write: The Son of 
God, who has eyes like a flame of fire, and His feet are like 
burnished bronze, says this: 

19 I know your deeds, and your love and faith and service and 
perseverance, and that your deeds of late are greater than at 
first. 

20 But I have this against you, that you tolerate your wife, J ez- 
ebel, who calls herself a prophetess, and she teaches and 
leads my servants astray, so that they commit fornication 
and eat things sacrificed to idols. 

21 And I gave her time to repent; and she does not want to re- 
pent of her fornication. 

22 Behold, I will cast her upon a bed, and those who commit 
adultery with her into great tribulation, unless they repent of 
her deeds. 

23 And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches 
will know that I am He who searches the minds and hearts; 
and I will give to each one of you according to your deeds. 



19. This passage should be compared to 19:12-13 and 15-16. 1 n the chiastic 
arrangement given there, v. 15 explains the meaning of v. 13 (how the blood 
came to be on the robe); and v. 16 explains v. 12 (the name written on the 
Lord). There, too, the point is not that no one knows what His name is- for 
the text itself tells us His name! - but, rather, that He is the only One who 
knows it in the sense of possessing it as His own. (See Kline's discussion of this 
point in Images of the Spirit, p. 130.) 

Ill 



2:18-20 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

24 But I say to you, the rest who are in Thyatira, who do not 
hold this teaching, who have not known the deep things of 
Satan, as they call them - I place no other burden on you. 

25 Nevertheless what you have, hold fast until I come. 

26 And he who overcomes, and he who keeps My deeds until 
the end, to him I will give authority over the nations. 

27 And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; like the vessels of 
a potter they shall be broken to pieces, as I also have received 
from My Father. 

28 And I will give him the morning star. 

29 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. 

18 One of the most significant things about the city of Thya- 
tira was the dominance of trade guilds over the local economy. 
Every imaginable manufacturing industry was strictly controlled 
by the guilds: In order to work in a trade, you had to belong to 
the appropriate guild. And to be a member of a guild meant also 
to worship pagan gods; heathen worship was integrally con- 
nected with the guilds, which held their meetings and common 
meals in pagan temples. Two central aspects of the required 
pagan worship were the eating of meat sacrificed to idols, and il- 
licit sexual relations. Any Christian who worked in a craft or 
trade was thus presented with severe problems: his faithfulness 
to Christ would affect his calling, his livelihood, and his ability 
to feed his family. 

The local god, the guardian of the city, was Tyrimnos, the 
son of Zeus; and Tyrimnos-worship was mixed in Thyatira with 
the worship of Caesar, who was also proclaimed the incarnate 
Son of God. The conflict of Christianity and paganism in Thya- 
tira was immediate and central - and so the first word of Christ 
to this church is the proclamation that He alone is the Son of 
God (the only place in the Revelation where this specific desig- 
nation of Christ is used). The letter to this church begins with an 
uncompromising challenge to paganism and statism, affirming 
the definitive, absolute uniqueness of J esus Christ. 

19-20 There was much that could be commended in the 
church at Thyatira. It was active in love and faith and service 
and perseverance - in fact, its activity was increasing: Your 
deeds of late are greater than at first. But, in spite of all good 

112 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CH URCH : OVERCOM E ! 2:19-20 

works of the church, its great defect in the eyes of Christ was its 
doctrinal and moral laxity (the Thyatirans were thus the op- 
posite number of the doctrinally correct Ephesians). The elders 
were allowing false doctrine to have a place in the church. Christ 
again calls the heresy by a symbolic name, as He had before 
(Nikolaos and Balaam); this time, the cult is identified with Jez- 
ebel, the wicked queen of Israel during the ninth century b.c., 
who led the covenant people into the idolatrous and adulterous 
worship of pagan gods (1 Kings 21:25-26; cf. 2 Kings 9:22, where 
her actions are specifically called "harlotries" and "witchcraft"). 
The "Jezebel" of the Thyatiran church similarly advocated com- 
promise with paganism. Of course, very pious-sounding termin- 
ology would have accompanied this - perhaps to the effect that, 
after all, there is only one God, so any worship rendered to false 
gods is "really" offered to the true God; or, that by joining 
pagans in their religious services one might be able to witness for 
Christianity; or, that going along with the heathen will enable 
Christians to survive rather than be wiped out by persecution; or 
perhaps that all religions have something to teach each other, 
and that we Christians should abandon our arrogant absolutism 
and seek to combine the best of our traditions with the best in 
the heathen traditions, thus creating a truly universal faith, one 
which answers the needs of all people and all cultures. 

Regardless of the rationale involved, the doctrine was her- 
esy, and was not to be tolerated. That is the precise term used 
here: You tolerate this woman, the Lord accuses them. And by 
tolerating her, the elders were placing the entire church in jeo- 
pardy, for she teaches and leads My servants astray, so that they 
commit fornication and eat things sacrificed to idols. This must 
be clearly understood: Orthodox, Biblical Christianity is intoler- 
ant. A church that tolerates evil and false doctrine is a church 
under judgment; God will not long tolerate her. Thisis not to 
say that Christians should be intolerant of each other's mis- 
takes, idiosyncrasies, and differences over nonessentials. But 
when it comes to clear violations of Biblical law and orthodox 
doctrine, the government of the church is required by Scripture 
to put a stop to it before it destroys the church. 

"J ezebel" was, figuratively if not literally, leading Christians 
into fornication and idolatrous communion, the effective aban- 
donment of the Christian faith for paganism and state-worship. 

113 



2:21-23 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

Was there literally a woman leading the Judaizers in this local 
area? The possibility is at least indicated by the specific accusa- 
tion against the angel/bishop of Thyatira: "You tolerate your 
wife, Jezebel ." It may be that the arch-heretic of Thyatira was 
the leading pastor's wife! On the other hand, Christ may be 
pointing in a more general way to the angel's failure, like Adam, 
properly to guard the Bride— a central function of the priestly 
calling. Because he had failed, she had become a Harlot . 2 ° 

21-23 Christ had given J ezebel time to repent ... of her 
fornication, and she had refused. We must emphasize again that 
this term is used in both a literal and a symbolic sense in Scrip- 
ture. Apparently, J ezebel had actually encouraged God's people 
to commit physical fornication in connection with the religious 
rites of the trade guilds; on the other hand, the use of the word 
fornication has a long Biblical history as a symbol of rebellion 
against the true God by those who belong to him (see, e.g., 
Ezek. 16 and 23). We have already noted the symbolic aspects of 
idolatrous eating and fornication; it is important to recognize 
also that St. John describes the Great Harlot of Babylon, identi- 
fied with apostate J udaism, with very clear references to the Bib- 
lical story of Jezebel, the Harlot Queen (17:5, 16; 19:2). This 
again confirms the interpretation that the doctrines of the NicO- 
laitans, the Balaamites, and the Jezebelites were identical, and 
were connected with the false Israel, the "synagogue of Satan." 
"J ezebel" had to be punished, and in a play on words the 
Lord declares: Behold, I will cast her into a bed! As many of the 
modern translations point out, this is a sickbed, explained by 
the next clause: and those who commit adultery with her into 
Great Tribulation. With grim humor, Jesus is saying: Do you 
want to "get in bed" (i.e., commit fornication)? Very well - 
here's a deathbed for you! Let us note carefully too that this 
first-century judgment against the followers of J ezebel is spoken 
of in terms of the Great Tribulation. Every Biblical indication 
regarding the Great Tribulation leads to the plain conclusion 
that it took place during the generation after Christ's death and 
resurrection - just as He said it would (Matt. 24:21, 34). 21 And I 



20. This is a major theme in the Book of J udges. SeeJ ames B.J ordan, 

Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985). 

21. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 85ff. 

114 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:24-25 

will kill her children (her followers; cf. Isa. 57:3) with death is, 
to our ears, a strange way of putting it. But this is a common 
Hebrew means of emphasis known as a pleonasm, a linguistic 
"double witness" to the certainty of its fulfillment (cf. Gen. 2:17, 
"Dying thou shalt die"). 22 

What happens when apostates are disciplined and judged? 
All the churches will know that I am He who searches the minds 
and hearts. God's character as the holy and omniscient J udge is 
vindicated in the churches (and in the world as well, Isa. 26:9) 
when He punishes those who rebel against Him. Those who truly 
love the Lord will heed the judgment and be spurred on to re- 
newed obedience when they are reminded again that He renders 
to each of us according to our deeds. 

24-25 Apparently, a central part of J ezebel's heresy involved 
a search into the deep things of Satan, as they call them. Con- 
necting thiswith what we already know of her teaching, it seems 
that her doctrine was a proto-Gnostic teaching that Christians 
would attain new and greater levels of sanctification by immer- 
sioninto the depths of Satanism: worshiping idols, committing 
fornication, entering to the fullest extent into the depravities of 
the heathen around them - sinning that grace might abound. 
The fact that such activity could be both sensually satisfying and 
economically profitable would not, of course, have been over- 
looked; but there was more to it than this. J ezebel's doctrine of 
sanctification through idolatry and fornication was simply a 
slightly Christianized version of the most ancient heresy in the 
world, and one which has been manifested in every culture from 
the beginning: salvation through chaos. Eve saw chaos, anarchy 
and revolution as the key to wisdom and the attainment of 
divine status; and the original Adulteress has had many follow- 
ers, as R. J . Rushdoony points out: "Chaos as revitalization has 
a long and continuing history in Western civilization, and, with 
the French Revolution, it gained a new vitality as revolution and 
sexual chaos became the means to social regeneration. In the 
world of art, the creative artist came to be identified as of neces- 
sity with a social and sexual anarchist, and in popular thinking, 



22. This underscores the fact that the human author of the Revelation was 
expressing his thoughts in Hebraic modes of speech. On the use of the 
pleonasm, see Jordan, The Law of the Covenant, pp. 96, 106. 

115 



2:26-29 PARTTWOiTHE seven letters 

order and morality came to mean monotony and devitalizing, 
enervating palls, whereas lawlessness means liberty and power. 
The middle-aged 'fling' and sexual license came into being as a 
grasping after renewal, and Negress prostitutes came to be used 
as a 'change of luck' device, an especial sin against order as a 
means of a recharging of luck and power. Basic to all these man- 
ifestations, from ancient Egypt through Caesar to modern man, 
is one common hope: destroy order to create order afresh, or, 
even more bluntly, destroy order to create order. "2 3 

But, Christ says, there are faithful Christians in Thyatira, 
who do not hold this teaching, who have not sought after for- 
bidden knowledge in Satanic practices, despite the economic 
and social consequences of their refusal to compromise; I place 
no other burden on you. Nevertheless what you have, hold fast 
until I come. This, again, reflects the language of the Jerusalem 
Council's letter to the Gentile converts: "For it seemed good to 
the Holy Spirit and to us to lay upon you no greater burden than 
these essentials: that you abstain from things sacrificed to idols 
. . . and from fornication; if you keep yourselves free from 
such things, you will do well" (Acts 15:28-29). The faithful are 
to continue practicing the essentials of the faith, holding to or- 
thodox standards of doctrine and life, until Christ comes with 
tribulation to judge the heretics and apostates who are illegally 
remaining in the Church. 

26-29 The faithful Christians in Thyatira were suffering 
from both the heathen world outside and the compromising her- 
etics within the church. They probably were tempted to doubt 
whether they would ever win in this struggle. The most prosper- 
ous and successful Christians were the ones who were the most 
faithless to Christ; it looked as if the orthodox were fighting a 
losing battle. They were so powerless by now that they were un- 
able even to oust the apostates from the church. Yet Christ 
promises the angel/bishop: He who overcomes, and he who 
keeps My deeds until the end, to him I will give authority over 
the nations. And he shall rule them with a rod of iron, as the 
vessels of a potter are broken to pieces, as I also have received 



23. R. J . Rushdoony, The One and the Many: Studies in the Philosophy of 
Order and Ultimacy (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1971] 191%), p. 105. 

116 



THE SPIRIT SPEAKS TO THE CHURCH: OVERCOME! 2:26-29 

from My Father. This is a reference to the Father's promise to 
the Son, as recorded in Psalm 2:8-9: 

Ask of Me, and I will surely give the nations as Thine inheritance, 
And the very ends of the earth as Thy possession. 
Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron, 
Thou shalt shatter them like earthenware. 

God the Son has been granted the rule of all the world, and 
all nations will come under His messianic kingship (see also Ps. 
22:27-31; 46:4, 10; 65:2; 66:4; 68:31-32; 72; 86:9; 102:15-22; 
138:4-5; 145:10-11). Whatever opposition is offered against His 
Kingdom will be crushed absolutely. And the installation of 
Christ as universal King, prophesied in this passage, clearly took 
place at Christ's First Coming, through His birth, life, death, 
resurrection, and ascension to glory (this can be confirmed by 
simply looking up the numerous New Testament quotations of 
Psalms 2 and 110, both of which are about Christ's kingship 24 ). 

The point of the quotation here is that the Christian over- 
comes, in this age, are promised a share in the messianic reign 
of Jesus Christ, in time and on earth. In spite of all opposition, 
God has set up His King over the nations (cf. Ps. 2:1-6). Those 
who are obedient to His commands will rule the world, recon- 
structing it for His glory in terms of His laws. Psalm 2 shows 
God laughing and sneering at the pitiful attempts of the wicked 
to fight against and overthrow His Kingdom. He has already 
given His Son "all authority in heaven and earth," and the King 
is with His Church until the end of the age (Matt. 28:18-20)! Is it 
possible that the King will be defeated? He has, in fact, warned 
all earthly rulers to submit to His government, or perish (Ps. 
2:10-12). And the same is true of His Church. The nation that 
will not serve us will perish (Isa. 60:12); all the peoples of the 
earth will be subdued under our feet (Ps. 47:1-3) — promises 
made originally to Israel, but now to be fulfilled in the New 
Israel, the Church. 



24. Psalms 2 and 110 are the two most quoted Psalms in the New Testament. 
For Psahn 2, seeMatt,3:17;17:5; M ark 1:11;9:7; Luke3:22;9:35;J ohn 1:49; 
Acts 4:25-26;13:33; Phil. 2:12; Heb. 1:2,5; 5:5; Rev. 2:26-27; 11:18; 12:5; 19:15, 
19. For Psalm 110, see Matt. 22:44; 26:64; Mark 12:36; 14:62; 16:19; Luke 
20:42-43; 22:69; J ohn 12:34; Acts 2:34-35; Rem. 8:34; 1 Cor. 15:25; E ph. 1:20; 
Col.3:l; Heb. 1:3, 13; 5:6, 10; 6:20;7:3, 17, 21; 8:1;10:12-13;12:2. 

117 



2:26-29 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

For the persecuted and seemingly weak church in Thyatira, 
this was good news. At the time, they were at the mercy of a 
powerful economic and political power; statism and state- 
worship were increasing; even their fellow Christians were being 
seduced by false prophets and heretics. To be a faithful Chris- 
tian in Thyatira meant hardship and suffering, and not necessar- 
ily a very glorious, headline-making sort of suffering, either. 
Just the day-to-day grind of faithfulness to Christ's Word; just 
the fact of being unemployed and unemployable in the midst of 
a booming economy, when everyone around them could get 
work for the mere price of burning a little incense, eating a little 
meat from a pagan altar, and engaging in a little "harmless" sex 
between consenting adults. There was no opportunist y for a 
great moral crusade; everyone just thought you were weird. 
And night after night your children would cry for food. No, this 
kind of martyrdom was not very glamorous at all. But those 
who remained faithful were promised that they would over- 
come, that they would rule with Christ. The situation would be 
reversed, the tables were about to be turned. Christ was coming, 
to save and to judge. 

The sufferings of these Christians did not mean the end of 
the world, but rather the beginning. What may have seemed like 
the approach of a long, dark night was really the herald of 
Christ's triumph over the nations. The conflicts they experienced 
were not a sign of Christ's defeat by the world, but simply the 
assurance that the battle had finally been joined; and the in- 
spired prophecy of Psalm 2 guaranteed that their Lord would be 
victorious, and they with Him. It was paganism, statism, and 
Judaism which were about to enter the darkness, as Christ turned 
the lights out all across apostate Israel and the Roman Empire. 
But for Christians the night was just ending; the redeemed and 
liberated universe was rushing headlong into a bright Day. 
Christ was about to give these overcomes the Morning Star. 



118 



3 
THE DOMINION MANDATE 

Sardis: Judgment on the Dead (3:1-6) 

1 And to the angel of the church in Sardis write: He who has 
the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars, says this: I 
know your deeds, that you have a name that you are alive, 
but you are dead. 

2 Wake up, and strengthen the things that remain, which were 
about to die; for I have not found your deeds completed in 
the sight of My God. 

3 Remember therefore what you have received and heard; and 
keep it, and repent. If therefore you will not wake up, I will 
come upon you like a thief, and you will not know at what 
hour I will come upon you. 

4 But you have a few people in Sardis who have not soiled 
their garments; and they will walk with Me in white; for they 
are worthy. 

5 He who overcomes shall thus be clothed in white garments; 
and I will not erase his name from the Book of Life, and I will 
confess his name before My Father, and before His angels. 

6 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. 

1 To the bishop of the church in Sardis, Christ announces 
Himself as the One who has the seven Spirits of God. As we 
have seen (on 1 :4) this is a term for the Holy Spirit who, as the 
Nicene Creed declares, "proceeds from the Father and the Son." 
Christ also possesses the seven stars, the angels of the churches 
(1:16, 20). The rulers of the churches are owned by Him and are 
at all points accountable to Him. And the elders in Sardis des- 
perately needed to be reminded of this, for they had allowed the 
church to die. 

I know your deeds, the Lord tells them. You have a name 

119 



3:2-3 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

that you are alive. The church of Sardis had a reputation for be- 
ing an active congregation, "alive" for Christ. Undoubtedly it 
was well-known in Asia as the representative of the Christian 
faith in a wealthy and famous city. It was, perhaps, fashionable 
and popular in the community; there is no evidence that, in a 
period of growing persecution, the church in Sardis was coming 
under attack. In fact, the evidence is all the other way, indicat- 
ing that the church had almost totally compromised with the 
surrounding culture. This busy, seemingly fruit ful and growing 
church was, in fact, dead. We should note that the death of Sar- 
dis did not necessarily consist in a lack of youth activities or fel- 
lowship meetings (which is the reason why churches tend to be 
called "dead" today). Rather, the church had become, as 
Mounce correctly observes, secularized. 1 Its fundamental 
worldview was no different from that of the surrounding pagan 
culture. Its outlook was similar to that of those who are else- 
where in Scripture characterized as "dead in trespasses and sins" 
(Eph. 2:1-3). Sardis had "completely come to terms with its 
pagan environment ."2 

2-3 The Lord gives Sardis two admonitions. First, He says, 
Wake up! G. R. Beasley-Murray points out some interesting his- 
tory about the town of Sardis which serves as an appropriate 
background to this statement: "Sardis was built on a mountain, 
and an acropolis was constructed on a spur of this mountain, 
which was all but impregnable. Yet twice in the city's history it 
had been taken unawares and captured by enemies. The parallel 
with the church's lack of vigilance, and its need to wake up lest it 
fall under judgment is striking." 3 Sardis is not quite completely 
dead, but these things are about to die. Although the Lord has 
not written off the entire church yet, the danger is real and im- 
mediate. The elders at Sardis must begin now to strengthen the 
things that remain. 

At this point, some members of Sardis could have complained: 
"What are You scolding us for? We haven't done anything!" 



1. Robert H. Mounce, TheBook. of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1977), p. 112. 

2. Ibid., p. 109. 

3. G. R. Beasley-Murray, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William 
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., [1978] 1981), p. 94. 

120 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:4-6 

And that was precisely the problem. Sardis had works; but they 
were not completed; they were unfulfilled in God's sight. In 
fact, Sardis may have appeared to be the most "alive" church for 
this very reason: As a dead church, it experienced neither theo- 
logical controversy nor persecution. "Content with mediocrity, 
lacking both the enthusiasm to entertain a heresy and the depth 
of conviction which provokes intolerance, it was too innocuous 
to be worth persecuting." 4 Satan may have felt that Sardis was 
coming along rather nicely without his interference, and was 
better off left alone. 

In His second admonition, Christ commands: Remember 
therefore what you have received and heard - the Gospel, the 
ministry and sacraments, and (in the case of the elders to whom 
this is specifically addressed) the privileges and responsibilities 
of officebearing in the Church of Jesus Christ. All these things 
they were to keep, to watch over and guard; and that meant that 
they must repent of their slothful attitude and conduct. 

If therefore you will not repent, Christ warns, I will come 
upon you like a thief, and you will not know at what hour I will 
come upon you. To repeat what has been painstakingly pointed 
out above (see on 1:7; 2:5, 16), the threat of Christ's coming 
against a local church, or even against a nation or group of na- 
tions, is not the same as the Second Coming (i.e., the end of the 
world). Everyone is accessible to Christ the Lord at all times, 
and any disobedient individual, family, church, business, soci- 
ety, or nation is liable to have Christ come in judgment - a j udg- 
ment which may include any or all the COvenantal curses listed in 
Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28. In any case, the words upon 
you indicate a local coming; the failure of commentators and 
preachers to understand this simple fact is the predictable result 
of a flat, futurist hermeneutic bordering on Biblical illiteracy. 

4-6 There were a few people in Sardis, however, who had re- 
mained faithful to what they had received and heard, and had 
not soiled their garments; they had not become secularized and 
conformed to the surrounding heathen culture. Of them, Christ 



4. G. B. Caird,The Revelation of St. John the Divine (New York: Harper& 
Row, Publishers, 1966), p.48. 

121 



3:4-6 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

says: They will walk with Me in white; for they are worthy. He 
who overcomes shall thus be clothed in white garments. The 
saints are seen in white garments seven times in the Book of 
Revelation (3:5, 18; 4:4;6:11;7:9, 13; 19:14), and it is obviously a 
symbol in Scripture for cleanliness and righteousness, with its 
ultimate origins in the sunlike brightness of the Glory-Cloud: In 
Christ, the saints are re-created in the image of God, and are 
clothed with the New Man, Jesus Christ (Gal. 3:27; Eph. 4:24; 
Col. 3:10). Our being clothed in the white robes of righteous- 
ness, therefore, takes place definitively at our baptism (Gal. 
3:27), progressively as we work out our salvation in daily obedi- 
ence to God's commandments, "putting on" the Christian graces 
and virtues (Col. 3:5-17), and finally at the Last Day (Col. 3:4; 
Jude 24). As with all the promises to the overcomes in Revela- 
tion, this too is simply a description of an aspect of salvation, in 
which all of God's elect have a share. 

In this letter's second promise regarding the overcomer, 
Christ says: I will not erase his name from the Book of Life. This 
statement has been the source of controversy for generations. 
Can a true Christian fall away? Can you lose your salvation? At 
least three erroneous answers have been offered: 

1 . Those who have been truly saved by Christ's redemption 
can fall away and be lost forever. This is the classical Arminian 
position, and it is absolutely and categorically denied by Scrip- 
ture. The nature of the salvation provided by Christ is eternal, 
and our justification in God's sight is not based on our works 
but on the perfect, finished righteousness and substitutionary 
atonement of Jesus Christ. (See John 3:16; 5:24; 6:35-40; 
10:27-30; Rem. 5:8-10; 8:28-39; Eph. 1:4-14; 1 Thess. 5:23-24; 
1 John 2:19). 

2. All those who have "accepted Christ" will be saved; no 
matter what they do afterwards, they cannot be damned. 'This is 
the classic "chicken Evangelical" position, and it too is opposed 
by Scripture. Those who take this view are attempting to have it 
both ways: They don't want the predestinating God preached by 
the Calvinist, but they don't have the courage to affirm full Ar- 
minianism, either. They want man to be sovereign in choosing 
his salvation, without interference from God's decree; yet they 
want the door of salvation to slam shut as soon as man gets in- 
side, so that he can't get out. But the Bible teaches that God has 

122 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:4-6 

absolutely predestined all things and rules sovereignly over all. 
He has infallibly chosen all those who will be saved, extending 
His irresistible grace toward them; and He has determined who 
will be damned, withholding His grace from them (see Matt. 
11:25-27; 20:16; 22:14; Mark 4:11-12; Luke 4:25-27; 17:1; 22:22; 
John 6:37-39, 44; 12:39-40; Acts 4:27-28; 13:48; Rem. 9:10-26; 
11:2,5-10; 1 Cor. 1:27-31; Eph. 1:4-5, 11; 1 Thess. 5:9; 2 Thess. 
2:13; 2 Tim. 1:9; 2 Tim. 2:10; 1 Pet. 1:1-2; 2:8-9; Jude 4).5 

The Bible also teaches, however, that there are those who 
profess Christ, and by all accounts appear to be among the 
elect, who will finally apostatize from the faith and inherit dam- 
nation rather than salvation. J udas is the obvious example, but 
he is by no means the only one. The Old Testament provides 
countless examples of members of the Covenant who departed 
from the faith, and the New Testament warns us again and again 
of the wrath of God against those who break His covenant (see 
Matt. 7:15-23; 13:20-21; 24:10-12; Mark 4:5-17; Luke 8:13; J ohn 
15:1-10; 1 Cor. 9:27; 10:1-12; 2 Thess. 2:3, 11-12; 1 Tim. 4:1-3; 
2 Tim. 3:1-9; 4:3-4; Heb. 2:1-3; 3:12-14; 6:4-6; 10:26-31, 35-39; 2 
Pet. 2:1-3, 20-22; 3:17). As John Murray wrote: "It is utterly 
wrong to say that a believer is secure quite irrespective of his 
subsequent life of sin and unfaithfulness. The truth is that the 
faith of J esus Christ is always respective of the life of holiness 
and fidelity. And so it is never proper to think of a believer irre- 
spective of the fruits in faith and holiness. To say that a believer 
is secure whatever maybe the extent of his addiction to sin in his 
subsequent life is to abstract faith in Christ from its very defini- 
tion and it ministers to that abuse which turns the grace of God 
into lasciviousness. The doctrine of perseverance is the doctrine 
that believers persevere; it cannot be too strongly stressed that it 
is the perseverance of the saints. And that means that the saints, 
those united to Christ by the effectual call of the Father and in- 
dwelt by the Holy Spirit, will persevere unto the end. If they 
persevere, they endure, they continue. It is not at all that they 



5. Those readers who would like to study this further should consult the 
following books, all published by the Banner of Truth Trust (P.O.Box 621, 
Carlisle, PA 17013): Arthur Pink, The Sovereignty of God;\ ohn Cheesemanet 
al., The Grace of God in the Gospel;] ohn Murray, Redemption Accomplished 
and Applied;] . Gresham Machen, The Christian View of Man; and 
R. B. Kuiper, The Bible Tells Us So. 

123 



3:4-6 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

will be saved irrespective of their perseverance or their continu- 
ance, but that they will assuredly persevere. Consequently the 
security that is theirs is inseparable from their perseverance. Is 
this not what Jesus said? 'He that endureth to the end, the same 
shall be saved.' " 6 

3. Everyone in the world is written in the Book of Life, but 
unbelievers are erased from it after they have passed the age of 
accountability. This idea is so ridiculous that the Bible doesn't 
even take the time to refute it directly (although the passages 
already listed demonstrate that it is pure poppycock, to put it 
nicely). Where in Scripture is there a shred of evidence for an 
"age of accountability"? Where does the Bible give any support 
whatsoever to the following little gem from a well-known Chris- 
tian scholar? 

Since Christ died for the sin inherent in every person conceived, 
a child who dies before becoming a deliberate and conscious sin- 
ner does not need to be "saved" from sin, since he has never sin- 
ned, and since Christ has made propitiation for his innate sin. 7 

There are at least five theological errors in that one sentence, 
but let's zero in on the main point: the notion that children are 
basically sinless, or without "deliberate" sin, when they are 
born, and remain in that condition until they reach the mystical 
"age of accountability y." In the first place, the true age of ac- 
countability is reached at the moment of conception: All men, 
at all times, are accountable to God (see Ps. 51:5; Rem. 3:23). 
Second, all men are under the sentence of condemnation al- 
ready; apart from the saving grace of God, they are condemned 
from the moment they exist (see John 3:18, 36; Rem. 5:12-19). 8 
Why else do babies die (Rem. 6:23)? Third, infants are 
deliberate sinners: "Even from birth the wicked go astray; from 



6. J ohn Murray, Redemption Accomplished and Applied (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing CO., 1955), pp.l54f. 

7. Out of sincere respect for this God-fearing author, who has rendered the 
Church valuable service, I shall omit his name. 

8. This is the doctrine of the imputation of Adam's sin (which should be 
distinguished from the doctrine of innate sin; but most evangelical, including 
preachers and commentators, don't seem to know the difference). A helpful 
exposition of this is in J ohn Murray, The Imputation of Adam's Sin (Nutley, 
NJ : Presbyterian and Reformed, [1959] 1977). 

124 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:4-6 

the womb they are wayward and speak lies" (Ps. 58:3; cf. Ps. 
53:2-3; Rem. 3:10-12, 23; Eph. 2:1-3). Now, either the "age of 
accountability" doctrine is in error, or the Bible is wrong. Which 
are we to believe? The fact is that the idea of the essential sin- 
lessness of infants is a pagan notion, unsupported by the Bible. 
It is merely antichristian sentimentalism, which refuses to hear the 
Word of God and attempts to replace it with the word of man - or, 
more likely, with the word of effeminate poets scribbling mushy 
greeting cards. It is right on the same level with the sentiment 
that every time a fairy blows its wee nose a baby is born. 

To conclude this point: The threat stated by Jesus Christ here 
is very real. Those who are in the Book of Life - i.e., who are bap- 
tized Church members professing Christ, and are thus counted 
as, and treated as, Christians - must remain faithful to Christ. If 
they apostatize into heresy, immorality, or simply the "seculariza- 
tion" that plagued Sardis, they will be erased, written out of the 
record of the redeemed. But the Christian who overcomes these 
temptations, thus demonstrating that Christ has truly purchased 
him for His own, is in no danger-his name will never be erased. 

The final promise to the overcomer reinforces the idea: I will 
confess his name before My Father, and before His angels. This 
echoes Jesus' statements in the Gospels: "Everyone therefore 
who shall confess Me before men, I will also confess him before 
My Father who is in heaven. But whoever shall deny Me before 
men, I will also deny him before My Father who is in heaven" 
(Matt. 10:32-33; cf. Mark 8:38; Luke 12:8-9). Many of the 
Christians in Sardis were denying Christ before their commun- 
ity, as they endeavored to be praised of men rather than of God. 
At the Last Judgment they would hear these words from the 
Son of God: / never knew you; depart from Me, you who prac- 
tice lawlessness (Matt. 7:23). But those who overcame these 
temptations would be joyfully acknowledged by Christ as His 
own. This message is as important and needed today as it was 
2000 years ago. Do we have ears to hear what the Spirit says to 
the churches? 

Philadelphia: Judgment on the Synagogue of Satan (3:7-13) 

7 And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write: He who 
is holy, who is tree, who has the key of David, who opens and 
no one will shut, and who shuts and no one opens, says this: 

125 



3:7 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

8 I know your deeds. Behold, I have put before you 'an open 
door which no one can shut, because you have a little power, 
and have kept My Word, and have not denied My name. 

9 Behold, I will cause those of the synagogue of Satan, who 
say that they are Jews, and are not, but lie - behold, I will 
make them to come and bow down at your feet, and to 
know that I have loved you. 

10 Because you have kept the word of My perseverance, I also 
will keep you from the hour of testing, that hour which is 
about to come upon the whole world, to test those who 
dwell upon the Land. 

11 1 am coming quickly; hold fast what you have, in order that 
no one take your crown. 

12 He who overcomes, I will make him a pillar in the Temple of 
My God, and he will not go out from it anymore; and I will 
write upon him the name of My God, and the name of the 
City of My God, the new J erusalem, which comes down out 
of heaven from My God, and My new name. 

13 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. 

7 Like the church in Smyrna, the church in Philadelphia 
had been especially persecuted by the apostate Jews. Christ 
begins his message to the elders by declaring Himself as the One 
who is holy, an established Biblical term for God (cf. Isa. 40:25), 
and who is true, in contrast to the lying leaders of the Jews, who 
had rejected the truth. Jesus Christ also has the key of David: He 
opens and no one will shut, and He shuts and no one opens. This 
is an allusion to Isaiah 22:15-25, in which God accuses a royal 
steward of falsehood, of betraying his trust. God declares: "I will 
depose you from your office, and I will pull you down from your 
station" (v. 19; cf. Gen. 3:22-24). Moreover, God would replace 
the false steward with a faithful one (cf. 1 Sam. 13:13-14): 

And I will clothe him with your tunic, 
And tie your sash securely about him. 
I will entrust him with your authority, 
And he will become a father to the inhabitants of J erusalem 

and to the house of J udah. 
Then I will set the key of the house of David on his shoulder: 
When he opens no one will shut, 
When he shuts no one will open. (Isa. 22:21-22) 

126 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:8-9 

Christ is thus announcing that the officers of apostate Israel 
are false stewards: they have been thrown out of office, removed 
from all rightful authority, and replaced by the One who is holy 
and true. The keepers of the door at the synagogue had excom- 
municated the Christians, declaring them to be apostates. In re- 
ality, Christ says, it is you of the synagogue who are the 
apostates; it is you who have been cast out of the Covenant; and 
I have taken your place as the True Steward, the Pastor and 
Overseer of the Covenant (cf. 1 Pet. 2:25). 

8-9 And so the Lord can comfort these suffering Christians 
who, on account of their faithful following of Christ, have 
suffered wrongful excommunication from the Covenant. I know 
your deeds, He assures them. You have been shut out of the 
door by the keyholders, but you must remember that I am the 
One who has the key, and behold, I have put before you a door 
which no one can shut. The Lord of the Covenant Himself has 
admitted them to fellowship, and has cast out those who pre- 
tend to hold the keys; the faithful Christians have nothing to 
fear. The church of Philadelphia has only a little power- it is 
not prominent, stylish, or outwardly prosperous, in contrast to 
the impressive, apparently "alive," compromising church at Sar- 
dis. Yet they have been faithful with what they have been given 
(cf. Luke 19:26): You . . . have kept My Word, and have not 
denied my name. 

Therefore, I will cause those of the synagogue of Satan, who 
say that they are Jews, and are not, but lie - behold, I will make 
them to come and bow down at your feet, and to know that I 
have loved you. Again the apostate Jews are revealed in their 
true identity: the synagogue of Satan (cf. 2:9). Again, there is 
no such thing as "orthodox" Judaism; there is no such thing as a 
genuine belief in the Old Testament that is consistent with a re- 
jection of Jesus Christ as Lord and God. Those who do not 
believe in Christ do not believe the Old Testament either. The 
god of Judaism is the devil. The Jew will not be recognized by 
God as one of His chosen people until he abandons his demonic 
religion and returns to the faith of his fathers - the faith which 
embraces Jesus Christ and His Gospel. When Christ-rejecting 
Jews claim to follow in the footsteps of Abraham, Jesus says, 
they lie. And, although they currently have the upper hand in 

127 



3:10-11 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

Philadelphia, their domination of the true covenant people will 
not last long. Christ Himself will force them to come and bow 
down at the Christians' feet. In this statement is an ironic refer- 
ence to Isaiah 60:14, where God gives this promise to the cove- 
nant people, who had been persecuted by the heathen: 

The sons of those who afflicted you will come bowing to you, 
And all those who despised you will bow themselves at the 

soles of your feet; 
And they will call you the City of the Lord, 
The Zion of the Holy One of Israel. 

Those who falsely claim to be Jews are really in the position 
of the persecuting heathen; and they will be forced to acknowl- 
edge the covenantal status of the Church as the inheritor of the 
promises to Abraham and Moses. For the Church is the true 
Israel, and in coming into the Church, these believers "have 
come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God" (Heb. 
12:22). Apostate Israel has been pruned out of the tree of life of 
the covenant people, while believers in Christ from all nations 
have been grafted in (Rem. 11:7-24). The only hope for those 
outside the covenant line, regardless of their ethnic or religious 
heritage, is to recognize Christ as the only Savior and Lord, sub- 
mitting themselves to Him. Unless and until the Jews become 
grafted into the covenant line by God's grace, they will remain 
outside the people of God, and will perish with the heathen. The 
Bible does hold out the promise that the descendants of Abra- 
ham will return to the faith of Jesus Christ (Rem. 11:12, 15, 
23-32). "But until they do, Scripture classes them with the 
heathen (with one major difference, however: the condemnation 
of the apostate Jew is much more severe than that of the unen- 
lightened pagan; see Rem. 2:1-29). 

10-11 Because the persecuted Christians of Philadelphia had 
kept the word of perseverance, their Lord promises in return to 
keep them from the hour of testing. Note well: Christ is not 
promising to rapture them or to take them away, but to keep 
them. In other words, He is promising to preserve them in trial, 



9. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 125ff. 

128 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:10-11 

to keep them from falling (Jude 24). Although this is one of the 
verses that dispensationalists have claimed for support of the 
"pre-tribulation rapture" theory, on close examination it actu- 
ally reveals itself to be nothing of the sort. In fact, it says noth- 
ing about the end of the world or the Second Coming at all: The 
"hour of testing" spoken of here is identified as that hour which 
is about to come upon the whole world, to test those who dwell 
upon the Land. It is speaking of the period of tribulation which, 
in the experience of the first-century readers, was about to 
come. Does it make sense that Christ would promise the church 
in Philadelphia protection from something that would happen 
thousands of years later? "Be of good cheer, you faithful, suffer- 
ing Christians of first-century Asia Minor: I won't let those 
Soviet missiles and Killer Bees of the 20th century get you!" 
When the Philadelphian Christians were worried about more 
practical, immediate concerns - official persecution, religious 
discrimination, social ostracism, and economic boycotts - what 
did they care about Hal Lindsey's lucrative horror stories? By 
twisting such passages as these to suit their passing fancies, cer- 
tain modern dispensationalists have added to the Word of God, 
and detracted from its message; and they thus come under the 
curses of Revelation 22:18-19. 

No, the promised hour of testing was in the immediate 
future, as Scripture universally testifies; a mere hour of trial, to 
be replaced by a thousand years of rule (20:4-6). St. John uses 
the expression those who dwell on the Land twelve times in Rev- 
elation (once for each of the twelve tribes) to refer to apostate 
Israel (3:10; 6:10; 8:13; 11:10 [twice]; 13:8, 12, 14 [twice]; 14:6; 
17:2, 8). In the Greek Old Testament (the version used by the 
early Church), it is a common prophetic expression for rebel- 
lious, idolatrous Israel about to be destroyed and driven from 
the Land Oer. 1:14; 10:18; Ezek. 7:7;36:17;Hos. 4:1,3; Joel 1:2, 
14; 2:l;Zeph. 1:18), based on its original usage in the historical 
books of the Bible for rebellious, idolatrous pagans about to be 
destroyed and driven from the Land (Num. 32:17; 33:52, 55; 
Josh. 7:9; 9:24; Judg. 1:32; 2 Sam. 5:6; 1 Chron. 11:4; 22:18; 
Neh. 9:24); Israel has become a nation of pagans, and is about 
to be destroyed, exiled, and supplanted by a new nation, the 
Church. The entire Roman world itself would be thrown into 
massive convulsions, part of which would involve the persecu- 

129 



3:12-13 part two: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

tion of Christians by a crazed, self-deified emperor, with the aid 
of the Jews. Days were coming in which the devil - in both his 
Roman and Jewish manifestations - would attempt to destroy 
Christianity once and for all. The end result would be the de- 
struction of Israel and Rome instead, but in the meantime there 
were hard times in store for the Christians, and many entice- 
ments to turn from the faith. Christ is here promising His faith- 
ful followers that they will be protected and enabled to perse- 
vere in the coming hour of trial. So again He reminds them: I 
am coming quickly - the promised judgment is not far off. 
Therefore, hold fast what you have, in order that no one take 
your crown. Christ has opened the door for the Church, grant- 
ing it the privilege of royal fellowship with God as His priests 
and kings; and they must endure for His sake, while His coming 
Kingdom shakes the nations of earth and routs His enemies 
from their strongholds. 

12-13 Again the promise totheovercomer involves a sym- 
bolic designation of salvation. First, Christ says, I will make 
him a pillar in the Temple of My God. This is related to the com- 
plex imagery of the Tabernacle and the Temple, whose architec- 
tural structures corresponded to the garments of the priests. 10 
The two side-posts of the Tabernacle (the pillars of the Temple) 
are called shoulders, while the headdress of the priest, inscribed 
with the name of God, corresponded to the lintel which over- 
arched the pillars.' ] Just as the two temple pillars were named 
He shall establish and In Him is strength (1 Ki. 7:21), so the 
shoulder-pieces of the high priest's ephod were inscribed with 
the names of the sons of Israel (Ex. 28:9-12). All this is brought 
together in Revelation, where the faithful overcomer is con- 
ceived of as a pillar in God's Temple. And he will not go out 
from it anymore: The people of God are characterized by stabil- 
it y and permanence (cf. Jer. 1:18; 1 Tim. 3:15). We have been 
redeemed from our wanderings. 

Continuing this imagery, Christ says: I will write upon him 



10. Meredith G. Kline has devoted an entire chapter to this subject. See "A 
Priestly Model of the I mage of God," i n Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: 
Baker Book House, 1980), pp. 35-56. 

11. Ibid., pp. 40., #f., 54f.;cf. Ex. 27:14-15; 1 Kings 6:8;7:15, 21, 39; 2 
Kings 11:11; 2 Chron. 3:17; Ezek. 40:18, 40ff.; 41:2, 26; 46:19; 47:1-2. 

130 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:12-13 

the name of My God, and the name of the City of My God, . . . 
and My new name. All this speaks of the full restoration of 
God's people to the image of God, as we see in the final chapter 
of Revelation: "And they shall see His face, and His name shall 
be in their foreheads" (Rev. 22:4). One of the basic blessings of 
the covenant is contained in the familiar benediction: "The 
Lord make His face shine upon you" (Num. 6:25); to see the 
shining of God's face means to partake of salvation and to re- 
flect the glory of God as His image-bearer (see Ex. 34:29-35; 
Num. 12:6-8; Ps. 80:3,7, 19; 2 Cor. 3:7-18;4:6; 1 John 3:2). Sim- 
ilarly, as we have already seen, the name of God inscribed on the 
forehead symbolizes the restoration of redeemed man to the 
ethical and physical glory which belongs to the image of God 
(cf. Gen. 3:19; Ex. 28:36-38; Deut. 6:4-9; and contrast 2 Chron. 
26:19). 

The picture is completed as the Christian is declared to be a 
citizen of the new Jerusalem, which comes down out of heaven 
from My God. The old Jerusalem, which had apostatized from 
the faith of Abraham, was under judgment, about to be de- 
stroyed; the old Temple, which God had abandoned, had be- 
come a sanctuary for demons, and was soon to be so completely 
demolished that not one stone would lie upon another (Matt. 
24:1-2). But now the Church of Christ is declared to be the city 
of God, the new Jerusalem, whose origin was not on earth but 
in heaven. The citizens of the old Jerusalem were to be scattered 
to the ends of the earth (Luke 21:24), while the Christian's rela- 
tionship to God is so intimate that he could be described as a 
very pillar in the Temple, the dwelling-place of God - a pillar, 
moreover, that could not be moved from its place, for the Chris- 
tian will not go out from it anymore. The children of the old 
Jerusalem were, like their mother, enslaved; while "the Jeru- 
salem above is free; she is our mother" (Gal. 4:26). Jesus had 
said: "Many shall come from east and west, and shall recline at 
the table with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom 
of heaven; but the sons of the kingdom shall be cast out into the 
outer darkness; in that place there shall be weeping and 
gnashing of teeth" (Matt. 8:11-12). And this was true of the over- 
coming Christians in Philadelphia. Although persecuted and 
discriminated against by the false Israel, as Isaac had been by 
Ishmael (Gen. 21:8-14; Gal. 4:22-31), they would see the false 

131 



3:14 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

sons disinherited and cast out, while they through Christ received 
the blessings of their father Abraham, and inherited the world 
(Rem. 4:13; Gal. 3:29). 

Laodicea: Judgment on the Lukewarm (3:14-22) 

14 And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: The 
Amen, the faithful and true Witness, the Beginning of the 
creation of God, says this: 

15 I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot; I 
would that you were cold or hot. 

16 So because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I 
will spit you out of my mouth. 

17 Because you say: I am rich, and have become wealthy, and 
have need of nothing; and you do not know that you are 
wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked. 

18 I advise you to buy from Me gold refined by fire, that you 
may become rich, and white garments, that you may clothe 
yourself, and that the shame of your nakedness may not be 
revealed; and eye salve to anoint your eyes, that you may 
see. 

19 Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline; be zealous 
therefore, and repent. 

20 Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears My 
voice and opens the door, I will come in to him, and will dine 
with him, and he with Me. 

21 He who overcomes, I will grant to him to sit down with Me 
on My throne, as I also overcame and sat down with My 
Father on His throne. 

22 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the 
churches. 

14 The wealthiest city in the region, Laodicea was another 
important center of emperor-worship. In His message to the 
elders of this church, Christ identifies Himself in three ways. 
First, Jesus says, He is the Amen. This is a familiar word to all 
Christians: We repeat it at the close of our creeds, hymns, and 
prayers. n It is generally understood to mean So be it; but its ac- 



12. Unfortunately, many fundamentalists and evangelical use the term 
nowadays to mean I feel good. Such usage, implicitly (though certainly not in- 
tentionally) bordering on blasphemy, is only one symptom of the subjective, 
man-centered attitude toward life which has become common during the past 
two centuries. 

132 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:14 

tual force, in terms of the theology of the Bible, is much 
stronger. It is really an oath: to say Amen means to call down 
upon oneself the curses of the Covenant (cf. Num. 5:21-22; 
Deut. 27:15-26; Neh. 5:12-13). As our "Yes and Amen" J esus 
Christ is the guarantee of the covenantal promises, by His per- 
fect obedience, atoning sacrifice, and continuing intercession in 
the court of heaven (2 Cor. 1:20; Gal. 3:13; Heb. 7:22-28; 
9:24-28; 10:10-14). Thus, our Amenin liturgical response to 
God's Word is both an oath and a recognition that our salvation 
is wholly dependent not upon our keeping of the Covenant but 
upon the perfect covenantkeeping of J esus Christ, who placed 
Himself under the Covenant stipulations and curses in our place. 
Second, this means that J esus is also the faithful and true 
Witness, on whose Word we may eternally depend. "He is a 
faithful Witness because his witness is true; and he is a true Wit- 
ness because in him is the complete realization of all the qualifi- 
cations which constitute any one really and truly a witness." 13 
And it is as this infallible and fully authoritative Witness that 
Christ bears convicting testimony against the church of Laodicea. 
Third, Jesus says, He is the Beginning of the creation of 
God: He is the arche, both the Origin and the Ruler of all crea- 
tion, as Paul also wrote in a letter he specifically intended the 
Laodicean church to read (see Col. 4:16): 

And He is the image of the invisible God, the Firstborn of all 
creation. For by Him all things were created, both in the heavens 
and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions 
or rulers or authorities - all things have been created by Him and 
for Him. And He is before all things, and in Him all things hold 
together. He is also the head of the Body, the Church; and He is 
the Beginning, the Firstborn from the dead; so that He Himself 
might come to have first place in everything. (Col. 1:15-18) 

Thus the One who speaks to Laodicea is the Amen, the great 
Guarantor of the Covenant, the infallible Witness who is Truth 
Himself, with all the authority possessed by the Creator and 
King of the universe. And He has come to bear testimony 
against His church. 



13. A. Plummer in The Pulpit Commentary: The Revelation of St. John the 
Divine (London: Funk and Wagnalls Company, n.d.), p. 115. 

133 



3 : 15-16 PART two : THE SEVEN le tters 

15-16 Laodicea was lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold. 
This has often been interpreted as if hot meant godly enthusi- 
asm and cold meant ungodly antagonism; but there is another 
explanation which suits the historical and geographical context 
better. Laodicea was situated between two other important 
cities, Colossae and Hieropolis. Colossae, wedged into a narrow 
valley in the shadow of towering mountains, was watered by icy 
streams which tumbled down from the heights. In contrast, 
Hieropolis was famous for its hot mineral springs which flowed 
out of the city and across a high plain until it cascaded down a 
cliff which faced Laodicea. By the time the water reached the 
valley floor, it was lukewarm, putrid, and nauseating. At Colos- 
sae, therefore, one could be refreshed with clear, cold, invigor- 
ating drinking water; at Hieropolis, one could be healed by 
bathing in its hot, mineral-laden pools. But at Laodicea, the 
waters were neither hot (for health) nor cold (for drinking). 14 

In other words, the basic accusation against Laodicea is that 
it is ineffectual, good for nothing. The Laodicean church brings 
neither a cure for illness nor a drink to soothe dry lips and 
parched throats. The sort of Christianity represented by Laodicea 
is worthless. The church provided "neither refreshment for the 
spiritually weary, nor healing for the spiritually sick. It was 
totally ineffective, and thus distasteful to its Lord." 15 Thus, says 
Mounce, "the church is not being called to task for its spiritual 
temperature but for the barrenness of its works." 16 This explains 
Christ's statement: I would that you were cold or hot. He is not 
saying that outright apostasy is preferable to middle-of-the- 
roadism; rather, He is wishing that the Laodicean Christians 
would have an influence upon their society. 

The Hippopotamus's day 

Is passed in sleep; at night he hunts; 

God works in a mysterious way - 

The Church can sleep and feed at once. 17 



14. C.J . Hemer, "Seven Cities of Asia Minor," in R. K. Harrison, ed., 
Major Cities of the Biblical World (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 
1985), pp. 246ff. 

15. M. J . S. Rudwick and E. M. B. Green, 'TheLaodiceanLukewarmness: 
in Expository Times, Vol. 69 (1957-58), p. 178; cited in Mounce, p. 125. 

16. Mounce, pp. 125f. 

17. FromT. S. Eliot, 'The Hippopotamus," Collected Poems 1909-1962 
(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1963), p. 42. 

134 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:17-18 

The Christian's calling is not to blend in with a pagan envi- 
ronment but to convert it, reform it, reconstruct it in terms of 
the whole counsel of God as mandated in His Word. To cite but 
one example of a modern Laodiceanism, consider the many 
Bible-believing, evangelical churches - which would shudder at 
the suggestion that they are "worldly" or "liberal" - which con- 
tinue on in their complacent lifestyle, organizing encounter 
groups and summer camps, completely oblivious to the murder 
of over 4000 unborn infants every day. Often, these churches 
are afraid of making "political" statements on the grounds that 
they might lose their tax exemptions. But whatever the excuse, 
such a church is disobedient to the Word of God. If a church is 
not transforming its society, if it is not Christianizing the cul- 
ture, what good is it? "If the salt has become tasteless, how will 
it be made salty again? It is good for nothing anymore, except to 
be thrown out and trampled under foot by men" (Matt. 5:13). 

So because you are lukewarm ... I will spit you out of my 
mouth. This is an echo of Leviticus 18:24-28: 

Do not defile yourselves by any of these things; for by all 
these the nations which I am casting out before you have become 
defiled. For the land has become defiled, therefore I have visited 
its punishment upon it, so the land has spewed out its inhabi- 
tants. But as for you, you are to keep My statutes and My judg- 
ments, and shall not do any of these abominations, neither the 
native, nor the alien who sojourns among you (for the men of 
the land who have been before you have done all these abomina- 
tions, and the land has become defiled); so that the land may not 
spew you out, should you defile it, as it has spewed out the na- 
tion which has been before you. 

The Laodicean lukewarmness is an abomination to the 
Lord. Because it is such a failure in making an impression upon 
the world (and thus conforming to heathen standards - or not 
making a fuss about those standards, which amounts to the 
same thing) the church is in danger of being cut off from Christ, 
its very leadership threatened with wholesale excommunication. 

17-18 The city of Laodicea was proud of its three outstand- 
ing characteristics: Its great wealth and financial independence 
as an important banking center; its textile industry, which pro- 

135 



3:19-20 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

duced "a very fine quality of world-famous black, glossy" 
wool"; 18 and its scientific community, renowned not only for its 
prestigious medical school, but also for an eyesalve (called 
"Phrygian Powder") which had been well-known since the days 
of Aristotle. Using these facts to illustrate the problems in the 
church, Christ cites the general attitude of the Laodicean Chris- 
tians: You say: I am rich, and have become wealthy, and have 
need of nothing. In reality, despite the church's wealth and 
undoubted social standing, it was ineffectual, accomplishing 
nothing for the kingdom of God. It is not a sin for a church (or 
an individual) to be rich - in fact, God wants us to acquire wealth 
(Deut.8:18). What is sinful is the failure to use our resources for 
the spread of the kingdom. When a relatively poor church such as 
that at Smyrna (see Rev. 2:9) was having a rich effect upon its 
community, there was no excuse for Laodicea's impotence. Her 
problem was not wealth, but disobedience: You do not know that 
you are wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked. 
Yet, in grace, Christ makes an offer of mercy: I advise you to 
buy from Me gold refined by fire, that you may become rich; 
and white garments, that you may clothe yourself, and that the 
shame of your nakedness may not be revealed; and eyesalve to 
anoint your eyes, that you may see. The symbolism here should 
be obvious. True faith and genuine works of obedience are 
spoken of in Scripture in terms of jewelry, and especially gold 
(lPet. l:7;lCor. 3:12-15); nakedness is symptomatic of disobe- 
dience (Gen. 3:7), whereas being clothed in white robes is a sym- 
bol of righteousness, with regard to both justification and sanc- 
tification (Gen. 3:21; Matt. 22:11; Rev. 19:8); and blindness is a 
symbol for man's impotence and fallenness (Lev. 21:18; Deut. 
29:4; Matt. 13:13-15; 16:3; 2 Cor. 4:3-4; 1 John 2:11) apart from 
God's restoration of him to true sight - the godly, mature ability 
to judge righteous judgment (Luke 4:18; Acts 26:18; 1 Cor. 
2:14-15). 

19-20 But Laodicea is not yet to be cast off by the Lord. 
Harsh as His words are, He still professes His love for His Bride. 
That, in fact, is the source of His anger: Because I love you, He 



18. Charles F . Pfeiffer and H oward F . Vos, The Wycliffe Historical Geo- 
graphy of Bible Lands (Chicago: Moody Press, 1967), p. 377. 

136 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:19-20 

declares, I reprove and discipline. A characteristic of those who 
are true sons of God, and not bastards (cf. Heb. 12:5-11) is their 
response to rebuke and discipline. All Christians need reproof 
and correction at times, and some more than others; what is im- 
portant is whether or not we heed the warning, and mend our 
ways. As far as Laodicea has fallen, it can still be restored if it 
renews its obedience and becomes faithful to God's Word: Be 
zealous therefore, and repent ! 

At this point Jesus speaks some of the most beautiful words 
in all the Bible, in what is perhaps the most well-known New 
Testament verse aside from John 3:16. Behold, I stand at the 
door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I 
will come in to him, and will dine with him, and he with Me. 
Several Reformed commentators have pointed out the wide- 
spread abuse of this passage by modern evangelical, who rip 
the verse from its context as a message to the elders of a church, 
and turn it into a watered-down, Arminian request from a weak 
and helpless deity who is at the mercy of man. We must remem- 
ber that Christ is speaking here as the Amen, the faithful and 
true Witness, the Creator and Sovereign Lord of all. He is not 
making a feeble plea, as if He did not rule history and predestine 
its most minute details; He is the King of Kings, who makes war 
on His enemies and damns them to everlasting flames. Nor is he 
speaking to people in general, for He is directing His message to 
His Church; nor, again, is he simply speaking to Christians as 
individuals, but to Christians as members of the Church. This 
verse cannot be made to serve the purposes of Arminian, sub- 
jective individualism without violently wrenching it from its 
covenantal and textual context. 19 

Nevertheless, there is a distortion on the other side that is 
just as serious. It will not do merely to point out the failures of 
Arminians to deal satisfactorily with this text, for Calvinists 
have traditionally been at fault here ar well. Reformed worship 
tends to be overly intellectual, centered around preaching. In 
the name of being centered around the Word, it is actually often 



19. Of course, the Lord offers Himself to people outside the Kingdom as 
well: Even the dogs are given crumbs from the children's table (Matt. 
15:21-28); and the king in Christ's parable (Luke 14:23) sent his servants out to 
compel the Gentiles to come in. But Christ's offer of salvation is never made 
outside the context of the Covenant, the Kingdom, and the Church. 

137 



3:19-20 PART TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

centered around the intellect. Reformed rationalism has thus 
produced its equal and opposite reaction in Arminian revival- 
ism, irrationalism, and anti-intellectualism. People have fled the 
barren, overly intellectual emphasis of Reformed worship and 
have run into the anti-theology heresies of what is unfortunately 
known as evangelicalism (which has, indeed, precious little of 
the original evangel). 20 

What is the answer? We must take seriously the Biblical doc- 
trine of the Real Presence of Christ in the sacrament of the 
Eucharist. We must return to the Biblical pattern of worship 
centered on Jesus Christ, which means the weekly celebration of 
the Lord's Supper, as well as instruction about its true meaning 
and efficacy. 2 1 We must abandon the rank platonism which in- 
forms our bare, intellectualized worship, and return to a truly 
corporate, liturgical worship characterized by artistic beauty 
and musical excellence. 22 

For it should be obvious that in this verse He is extending to 
the Church an offer of renewed communion with Himself. The 
very heart and center of our fellowship with Christ is at His 
table (i.e., our earthly table which He has made His). The most 
basic, and most profound, offer of salvation is Christ's offer to 
dine with us. In Holy Communion we are genuinely having din- 
ner with Jesus, lifted up into His heavenly presence; and, more- 
over, we are feasting on Him: 

Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son 



20. SeeJ ames B.J ordan's essay "Holistic Evangelism" in his Sociology of 
the Church (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1986). 

21. See Geddes M acGregor, Corpus Christi: The Nature of the Church Ac- 
cording to the Reformed Tradition (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 
1958); and Ronald S. Wallace, Calvin's Doctrine of the Word and Sacrament 
(Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, [1953] 1982). 

22. One of the most helpful books on worship from a Reformed perspective 
is Richard Paquier, Dynamics of Worship: Foundations and Uses of Liturgy 
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967). For viewpoints from other traditions see 
Louis Bouyer,Lz'fwrgz'ca/Pzery (University of Notre Dame Press, 1955); J osef 
A. J ungmann, S. J ., The Early Liturgy to the Time of Gregory the Great (U ni- 
versity of Notre Dame Press, 1959); Alexander Schmemann, Introduction to 
Liturgical Theology (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1966); 
Luther D. Reed, The Lutheran Liturgy (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 
1947); Massey H . Shepherd J r., The Worship of the Church (Greenwich, CT: 
The Seabury Press, 1952); andCheslynJ ones et al, eds., 77ze Study of Liturgy 
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1978). 

138 



THE DOMINION MANDATE 3:21-22 

of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in yourselves. He 
who eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I 
will raise him up on the last day. For My flesh is true food, and 
My blood is true drink. He who eats My flesh and drinks My 
blood abides in Me, and I in Him. As the living Father sent Me, 
and I live because of the Father, so he who eats Me, he also shall 
live because of Me. (J ohn 6:53-57) 

2 1 -22 The final promise to the overcomer is a promise of 
dominion with Christ: I will grant to him to sit down with Me on 
My Throne, as I also overcame and sat down with My Father on 
His Throne. Is this only a future hope? Assuredly not. The privi- 
lege of ruling with Christ belongs to all Christians, in time and 
on earth, although the dominion is progressive through history 
until the final consummation. But Christ has entered upon His 
Kingdom already (Col. 1:13); He has disarmed Satan and the 
demons already (Col. 2:15); and we are kings and priests with 
Him already (Rev. 1:6); and just as He conquered, so we are to 
go forth, conquering in His name. He reigns now (Acts 
2:29-36), above all creation (Eph. 1:20-22), with all power in 
heaven and in earth (Matt. 28:18-20), and is engaged now in put- 
ting all enemies under His feet (1 Cor. 15:25), until His kingdom 
becomes a great mountain, filling the whole earth (Dan. 2:35, 
45). 

We have thus been faced again and again in these messages 
to the churches with the fundamental command of Revelation, 
that which St. John admonished us to keep (1:3): Overcome! 
Conquer! Even aside from the fact that the prophecy is not 
about the twentieth century, we will miss its point if we concen- 
trate on persecutions or emperor-worship in the same way that 
the Hal Lindseys of this age concentrate on oil embargoes, com- 
mon markets and hydrogen bombs: the basic message is about 
none of these, but rather about the duty of the Church to con- 
quer the world. R. J. Rushdoony has well said: "The purpose of 
this vision is to give comfort and assurance of victory to the 
Church, not to confirm their fears or the threats of the enemy. To 
read Revelation as other than the triumph of the kingdom of God 
in time and eternity is to deny the very essence of its meaning." 23 



23. RousasJ ohn Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel and 
Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1970] 1978), p. 90. 

139 



3:21-22 part TWO: THE SEVEN LETTERS 

The great failure of what is commonly known as "amillen- 
nialism" is its unwillingness to come to terms with these domin- 
ical implications of the mediatorial reign of Jesus Christ, The 
New Testament writers constantly urge God's people to "over- 
come" in the light of Christ's definitive victory. Having been re- 
created in His image, according to His likeness (Eph.4:24; Col. 
3:10), and becoming more and more conformed to His image 
(Rem. 8:29-30), we are kings with Him now, in this age. He has 
given us legal title to all things (cf. Rem. 8:32; 1 Cor. 3:21-22), 
and on this basis we are to exercise dominion under His lordship 
in every area of life. Amillennialists, however, while professing 
to believe in the existence of Christ's present Kingdom, often 
characteristically deny its practical relevance to this world. For 
example, Dr. Meredith G. Kline's brilliant study Images of the 
Spirit has an excellent chapter on "A Prophetic Model of the Im- 
age of God," in which he shows how the restoration of God's 
image to the Church through Christ means that "all the Lord's 
people are prophets" (cf. Num. 11:29; Acts 2:17-18). 24 Kline also 
has a superb chapter on "A Priestly Model of the Image of 
God," a fascinating exposition of the priesthood of all believers 
in the image of Christ, our definitive High Priest. 25 But Christ is 
Prophet, Priest, and King - yet, significantly, Kline neglected to 
write an essay on "A Kingly Model of the Image of God." But if 
Christians image Christ in His role of Prophet and Priest, they 
are kings as well, in the image of the King. That is precisely the 
burden of the verses under discussion: The Lord Jesus Christ 
shares His conquest and enthronement with His people. Because 
He overcame and sat down with the Father on His Throne, He 
now summons us to enjoy regal dominion with Him, inheriting 
all things. 



24. Kline, Images of the Spirit, pp. 57-96. 

25. Ibid., pp. 35-56. 

140 



Part Three 

ETHICAL STIPULATIONS: 
THE SEVEN SEALS 

(Revelation 4-7) 

Introduction 
The third section of the covenantal treaty (cf. Deut. 5:1-26:19)' 
declared the way of Covenant life required of the vassals, the 
laws of citizenship in the Kingdom. As St. Paul declared, all 
men "live and move and exist" in God (Acts 17:28); He is the 
Foundation of our very being. This means that our relationship 
to Him is at the center of our existence, of our actions and think- 
ing in every area of life. And central to this relationship is His 
Sanctuary, where His subjects come to worship Him before His 
Throne. Thus the major concern of the Stipulations section is the 
thorough consecration of the people to God, with special impor- 
tance placed on the establishment of one central Sanctuary: 

You shall seek the Lord at the place which the Lord your 
God shall choose from all your tribes to establish His name there 
for His dwelling, and there you shall come. (Deut. 12:5; cf. all of 
ch. 12) 

As Meredith Kline observes, "The centralization require- 
ment must ... be understood in terms of Deuteronomy's 
nature as a suzerainty treaty. Such treaties prohibited the vassal 
to engage in any independent diplomacy with a foreign power 
other than the covenant suzerain. In particular, the vassal must 
not pay tribute to any other lord." 2 The centrality of the Sanc- 



1. See Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Struc- 
ture of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B.Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
1963), pp. 62-120. 

2. Ibid., p. 80. 

141 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

tuary helped to underscore the fact that it was an image of the 
Sanctuary in heaven (Ex. 25:9,40; 26:30; Num. 8:4; Acts 7:44; 
Heb. 8:5; 9:23). 

This is also the emphasis of the Stipulations section of Reve- 
lation. The passage opens with St. John's ascension to God's 
Throneroom, and this provides the central vantage point for the 
prophecy as a whole: All things are seen in relation to the 
Throne. The judgments that are bound on earth were first 
bound in heaven. 3 

Obviously, an important aspect of the Stipulations section in 
Deuteronomy is the Law itself, the sign of God's covenantal 
lordship. Moses takes great care repeatedly to remind Israel of 
the Covenant at Sinai, with the Ten Commandments engraved 
on the tablets of stone (Deut. 5, 9-10). Similarly, this section of 
Revelation (ch. 5) deals with a Covenant document that, like the 
original stone tablets, is written on both front and back. 

The laws of the Covenant decreed a program of conquest 
over the ungodly nations of Canaan: Israel defeated its enemies 
through the application of the Covenant. The holy war simply 
carried out the death sentence declared in the courtroom; it was 
fundamentally an ethical, judicial action, bringing the death 
penalty against the wicked. 4 The program of conquest, based on 
the law of God, thus issued from the central Sanctuary. (It is in- 
teresting that as this program is spelled out in Deuteronomy 7, 
Moses speaks symbolically of "seven nations" to be destroyed.) 5 
Of course, the law provides not only for the judgment of the 
Canaanites, but also for Israelites who apostatize from the 
Covenant: Those who repudiate God's authority and follow 
after other gods are to be put to death, a judgment that, like the 
others, proceeds ultimately from the altar in the central Sanc- 
tuary (Deut. 13:1-18; 17:1 -13). 6 

As Deuteronomy 20 makes clear, this Sanctuary-judicial 



3. Cf. Matt. 18:18, which literally reads: 'Truly I say to you, whatever you 

shall bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven; and whatever you loose 
on earth shallhave been loosed in heaven." I n delivering righteous judgments, 
ministers on earth are manifesting thej udgment of heaven. 

4. See Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion by Covenant 
(Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

5. Cf. Kline, p. 68. 

6. Ibid., pp. 84ff.,94ff. 

142 



INTRODUCTION TO PART THREE 

aspect is central even to the warfare waged against foreign na- 
tions, beyond the borders of the theocracy: Battles were conse- 
crated by the priest to the glory of God and His covenantal 
Kingdom (v. 1-4). A war of this kind was always preceded by an 
offer of peace; if the offer were refused, all the men of the city 
would be put to the sword. Kline explains the typology: "In 
Israel's offer of peace (v. 10) and in the submission of the Gentile 
city as a covenant tributary to Yahweh (v. 11) there was imaged 
the saving mission of God's people in the world (cf. Zech. 9:7b, 
10b; Luke 10:5-16). The judgment of those who refuse to make 
their peace with God through Christ was exhibited in the siege, 
conquest, and punishment of the unsubmissive city (v. 13)."7 

We find all this in Revelation as well - with the difference 
that, as a Covenant Lawsuit against apostate Israel, the judg- 
ments once decreed against the ungodly Gentiles are now un- 
leashed on the lawless Covenant people, who had rejected 
Christ's offer of peace. As the book of the Covenant is opened, 
the cherubic creatures carrying the altar cry out: "Come !" - and 
four horsemen ride out to conquer the Land, bringing destruc- 
tion and death in fulfillment of the covenantal curses, applying 
the just and holy judgment of the Sanctuary in heaven. 

Another major subject of the Stipulations section in Deu- 
teronomy is the requirement to appear at the sacred feasts, in- 
volving three annual pilgrimages to the central Sanctuary: for 
the feasts of Passover/Unleavened Bread (16:1-8), Pentecost 
[Weeks] (16:9-12), and Tabernacles [Booths] (16:13 -15).' The 
same order is followed in this section of Revelation. Chapter 5 
contains imagery from Passover, where we see worshipers in the 
sanctuary giving thanks for "the Lamb that was slain." Chapter 
6 takes up the theme of Pentecost (the anniversary of the giving 
of the Law at Sinai): The lawbook of the Covenant is unsealed, 
bringing a series of judgments patterned after Habakkuk3, a 
synagogue reading for Pentecost." Then chapter 7 brings us into 
a vision of the eschatological Feast of Tabernacles, '0 in which 



7. Ibid., p. 106. 

8. Ibid., pp. 91-94. 

9. M. D . Goulder, The Evangelists ' Calendar: A Lectionary Explanation 
for the Development of Scripture (London: SPCK, 1978), P. 177. 

10. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 44ff.,60. 

143 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

the countless multitudes redeemed from every nation stand be- 
fore the Throne with palm branches in their hands (cf. Lev. 
23:39-43), praising God as their Redeemer-King (cf. Deut. 
26:1-19) u and receiving the fullness of blessing foreshadowed in 
this feast: "And He who sits on the Throne shall spread His 
Tabernacle over them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst 
any more; neither shall the sun beat down on them, nor any 
heat; for the Lamb in the center of the Throne shall be their 
Shepherd, and shall guide them to the springs of the water of 
life; and God shall wipe away every tear from their eyes" (Rev. 
7:15-17). 



11. See Kline, pp. 118fF. 

144 



4 
THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 

The Pattern for Worship (4:1-11) 

1 After these things I looked, and behold, a door standing 
open in heaven, and the first Voice which I had heard, like 
the sound of a trumpet speaking with me, said: Come up 
here, and I will show you what must take place after these 
things. 

2 Immediately I was in the Spirit; and behold, a Throne was 
standing in heaven, and One sitting 

3 like a jasper stone and a sardius in appearance; and there 
was a rainbow around the Throne, like an emerald in ap- 
pearance. 

4 And around the Throne were twenty-four thrones; and upon 
the thrones I saw twenty-four elders sitting, clothed in white 
garments, and golden crowns on their heads. 

5 And from the 'Throne proceed flashes of lightning and voices 
and peals of thunder. And there were seven lamps of fire burn- 
ing before His Throne, which are the seven Spirits of God; 

6 and before the Throne there was, as it were, a sea of glass 
like crystal; and in the middle of the Throne and around it 
were four living creatures full of eyes in front and behind. 

7 And the first creature was like a Lion, and the second crea- 
ture was like a Bull, and the third creature had a face like that 
of a Man, and the fourth creature was like a flying Eagle. 

8 And the four living creatures, each one of them having six 
wings, are full of eyes around and within; and they have no 
rest day and night, saying: 

Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God, the Almighty, who 
was and who is and who is to come. 

9 And when the living creatures give glory and honor and 
thanks to Him who sits on the Throne, to Him who lives for- 
ever and ever, 

145 



4:1 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

10 the twenty-four elders will fall down before Him who sits on 
the Throne, and will worship Him who lives forever and 
ever, and will cast their crowns before the Throne, saying: 

11 Worthy art Thou, our Lord and God, the Holy One, to 
receive glory and honor and power; for Thou didst cre- 
ate all things, and because of Thy will they existed, and 
were created. 

1 This verse is used by advocates of Dispensationalism to 
support their "Rapture Theory," the notion that the Church will 
be snatched away from this world before a coming Tribulation; 
indeed, this verse seems to be the main proof-text for a pre-Trib- 
ulation rapture. St. John's "rapture" into heaven is regarded as a 
sign that the whole Church will disappear before the plagues re- 
corded in the following chapters are poured out. Part of the ra- 
tionale for this understanding is that the Voice John heard was 
like the sound of a trumpet, and St. Paul says that a trumpet 
will sound at the "rapture" (1 Thess. 4:16). Some advocates of 
this position seem oblivious to the fact that God uses a trumpet 
on numerous occasions. In fact, as we have seen in the first 
chapter, the connection between God's Voice and the sound of a 
trumpet occurs throughout Scripture, beginning with the j udg- 
ment in the Garden of Eden. For that matter, St. John heard the 
voice like a trumpet in the first vision (Rev. 1:10). (Does this indi- 
cate a possible "double rapture"?) ] 

The Dispensationalist school of interpretation also appeals 
to the fact that, after the Voice has said Come up here, "The 
word 'church' does not again occur in the Revelation till all is 
fulfilled." 2 This singular observation is set forth as abundant 
proof that the Book of Revelation does not speak of the 
"Church" 3 from this point until the Second Coming (generally 



1. But wait! Chapters 8-11 record the soundings of no less than seven more 
trumpets- could there be nine raptures? 

2. The Scofield Reference Bible (New York: Oxford University Press, [1909] 
1945), note on Rev. 4:1; cf. Hal Lindsey, There's a New World Coming: A Pro- 
phetic Odyssey (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1973), pp. 74ff. 

3. The Dispensationalist use of the word Church is very different from its 
use in historical, orthodox theology. See 0. T. Al I is. Prophecy and the Church 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1945,1947), pp. 54-110; L. Berkhof, 
Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
fourth revised cd., 1949), pp. 562-78; and Roderick Campbell, Israel and the 
New Covenant (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, [1954] 1983). 

146 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:1 

placed in 19:11), which in turn proves that the Church has been 
raptured and is absent, in heaven, away from all the excitement — 
all because the word "Church" is missing! On the basis of such a 
curious principle of interpretation we could say with assurance 
that Revelation doesn't tell us anything about Jesus either until 
chapter 12, because the name "Jesus" does not occur until then 
(thus "the Lion of the tribe of Judah" and "the Lamb that was 
slam" [5: 5-6] must be terms for someone else). 4 Of course, this 
method of interpretation involves even more problems for the Dis- 
pensationalist: for the word "Church" never again appears in the 
entire Book of Revelation at all! This interpretation of the words 
Come up here does not, therefore, support the pretribulation 
rapture of the Church; it possibly even teaches the pretribulation 
annihilation of the Church. After the last verse in Revelation 3, 
the Church simply disappears, and is never heard from again. 

Obviously, this is not true. The Church is known by numer- 
ous names and descriptions throughout the Bible, 5 and the mere 
fact that the single term "Church" does not appear is no indica- 
tion that the concept of the Church is not present. Those who 
see in this verse some "rapture" of the Church are importing it 
into the text. The only one "raptured" is St. John himself. The 
fact is that St. John only uses the word Church with reference to 
particular congregations - not for the whole body of Christ. 

Nevertheless, we must also recognize that St. John does as- 
cend to a worship service on the Lord's Day; and this is a clear 
image of the weekly ascension of the Church into heaven every 
Lord's Day where she joins in the communion of saints and 
angels "in festal array" (Heb. 12:22-23) for the heavenly liturgy. 
The Church acts out St. John's experience every Sunday at the 
Sursum Cords, when the officiant (reflecting Christ's Come up 
here!) cries out, Lift up your hearts! and the congregation sings 

4. This principle can be fruitfully applied elsewhere in Scripture as well. For 
example, the word love does not appear anywhere in the Bookof Ruth; thus 
her story turns out not to be, after all, one of the greatest romances in the 
Bible, for Boaz and Ruth did not love each other. Again, the word God does 
not appear in the book of Esther; on these principles, He must not have been 
involved with those events, and the book must not tell us anything about Him. 
In addition, thefirst fifteen chapters of Paul's letter to the Remans doesn't 
concern the Church, for the wordChurch doesn't appear there either! 

5. Paul Minear lists ninety-six of them in the New Testament alone: Images 
of the Church in the New Testament (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 
1960), pp. 222ff, , 268f. 

147 



4:1 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

in response, We lift them up to the Lord! We noted in an earlier 
chapter the comment of St. Germanus that "the Church is an 
earthly heaven"; the Patriarch continued: "The souls of Chris- 
tians are called together to assemble with the prophets, apostles, 
and hierarchs in order to recline with Abraham, Isaac, and 
Jacob at the mystical banquet of the Kingdom of Christ. There- 
by having come into the unity of faith and communion of the 
Spirit through the dispensation of the One who died for us and 
is sitting at the right hand of the Father, we are no longer on 
earth but standing by the royal Throne of God in heaven, where 
Christ is, just as He Himself says: 'Righteous Father, sanctify in 
Your name those whom You gave me, so that where I am, they 
may be with Me' (cf. John 17). " 6 John Calvin agreed: "In order 
that pious souls may duly apprehend Christ in the Supper, they 
must be raised up to heaven. . . . And for the same reason it 
was established of old that before consecration the people 
should be told in a loud voice to lift up their hearts.'" 

We have already seen (on 1:10) that the expression in the 
Spirit (v. 2) is technical prophetic language, referring not to St. 
John's subjective feelings but to his objective experience as an 
inspired receiver of divine revelation. Being "in the Spirit" was 
the special privilege of the Biblical prophets. Summarizing his 
extensive research on this point, Meredith Kline writes: "Adam's 
creation as image-reflector of the glory of the Creator-Spirit was 
recapitulated in the history of the prophets. The critical event in 
the formation of a prophet was a transforming encounter with 
the Glory-Spirit from which the prophet emerged as a man re- 
flecting the divine Glory. ... To be caught up in the Spirit was 
to be received into the divine assembly, the heavenly reality 
within the theophanic Glory-Spirit. The hallmark of the true 
prophet was that he had stood before the Lord of Glory in the 
midst of this deliberative council of angels." 8 

But, with the coming of the New Covenant, what was once 
the special prerogative of the prophetic class within the Cove- 



6. St. Germanus of Constantinople, On the Divine Liturgy, trans. Paul 
Meyendorff (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1984), p. 101. 

7. J ohn Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 4:17:36 (Philadelphia: 
The Westminster Press, 1960), Ford Lewis Battles trans., p. 1412. 

8. Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1980), pp. 57f. 

148 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:2-3 

nant community has become the privilege of all. The desire of 
Moses - "Would that all the Lord's people were prophets, that 
the Lord would put His Spirit on them!" (Num. 11:29) - has 
been fulfilled in the Pentecostal outpouring of the Holy Spirit 
(Acts 2:17-21). Just as Moses (the prophet par excellence of the 
Old Covenant) was uniquely privileged to speak with God face 
to face (Num. 12:6-8), partaking of His glory (Ex. 34:33-35), so 
now "we all, with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the 
glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image 
from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit" (2 Cor. 
3:18). Every believer has received the prophetic anointing 
(1 John 2:20, 27); and every week we ascend in the Spirit into the 
heavenly assembly. 9 

In part, therefore, the "Rapture Theory" is based on a mis- 
understanding of the Christian doctrine of the Ascension of the 
Church. The definitive Ascension took place positional'y with 
Jesus Christ, in whom we are seated in the heavenlies (Eph.l:20; 
2:6); the progressive (experiential) Ascension takes place litur- 
gically with Jesus Christ every week, in the celebration of the 
Eucharist (Heb. 12:22-24); and the final (culminative) Ascension 
takes place eschatologically with Christ a) spiritually, at death 
(Rev. 20:4), and b) bodily, at the end of history (1 Cor. 15:50-55; 
1 Thess. 4:17). 10 

2-3 In order to receive the revelation, St. John is caught up 
to heaven, where he sees a Throne and One sitting: John is going 
to view the coming events from the true vantage point, the 
Chariot-Throne of God in the Glory-Cloud. God is the Deter- 
miner of all things, and a right understanding of the world must 
begin from a right understanding of the centrality of His 
Throne. "In the infinite wisdom of the Lord of all the earth, 
each event falls with exact precision into its proper place in the 
unfolding of His eternal plan; nothing, however small, however 
strange, occurs without His ordering, or without its peculiar fit- 
ness for its place in the working out of His purpose; and the end 



9. See George Van dervelde's paper, 'The Gift of Prophecy and the Pro- 
phetic Church" (Toronto: Institute for Christian Studies, 1984). 

10. On this definitive-progressive-final pattern, see David Chilton, Paradise 
Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 
1985), pp. 24, 42, 73, 136, 146-57, 206, 209, 223. 

149 



4:4 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

of all shall be the manifestation of His glory, and the accumula- 
tion of His praise." n 

And He who was sitting was like a jasper stone and a sardius 
in appearance: God is seen as in a blaze of unapproachable light 
(cf. 1 Tim. 6:16), for St. John has been caught up into the 
heavenly holy of holies, the inner Sanctuary of the cosmic Tem- 
ple in the Cloud of glory. Underscoring this is the fact that John 
sees a rainbow around the Throne, like an emerald in appear- 
ance. It is worth noting that these three stones, jasper (perhaps 
an opal or a diamond), 12 sardius (a reddish stone), and emerald, 
represented three of the twelve tribes of Israel on the breastplate 
of the high priest (Ex. 28:17-19, LXX); they are also mentioned 
among the jewelry that littered the ground in the Garden of 
Eden (Ezek. 28:13, LXX). Compare John's vision with that of 
the prophet Ezekiel: 

. . . there was something resembling a Throne, like lapis 
lazuli in appearance; and on that which resembled a Throne, 
high up, was a figure with the appearance of a man. Then I 
noticed from the appearance of His loins and upward something 
like glowing metal that looked like fire all around within it, and 
from the appearance of His loins and downward I saw some- 
thing like fire; and there was a radiance around Him. As the ap- 
pearance of the rainbow in the clouds on a rainy day, so was the 
appearance of the surrounding radiance. Such was the appear- 
ance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord. (Ezek. 1:26-28) 

St. John is thus in the true Temple, the heavenly archetype 
that formed the pattern for Moses' construction of the Taber- 
nacle (Ex. 25:40; Heb. 8:1-2,5; 9:23-24). He sees the Throne, 
corresponding to the Mercy-Seat; the Seven Lamps, corre- 
sponding to the Seven-Branched Lamp; the Four Living Crea- 
tures, corresponding to the Cherubim; the Sea of Glass, corre- 
sponding to the Bronze "Sea"; and the Twenty-Four Elders, cor- 



11. Benjamin B. Warfield, "Predestination," i n Biblical and Theological Stud- 
ies (Nutley, NJ : Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1968), p. 285. 

12. "I n antiquity the name was not limited to the variety of quartz now 
called jasper, but could designate any opaque precious stone." William F . 
Arndt and F . Wilbur Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testa- 
ment and Other Early Christian Literature (Chicago: The University of 
Chicago Press, 1957), p. 369. 

150 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:4 

responding to the Twenty-Four Courses of Priests. (See Appen- 
dix A for a more full account of the Levitical symbolism here 
and throughout Revelation.) 

4 Around the Throne St. John sees twenty-four thrones, on 
which are seated twenty-four elders. Who are these elders? In a 
well-known essay, the great New Testament scholar Ned Stone- 
house, of Westminster Seminary, defended the view that these 
elders are "celestial beings of a rank superior to the angels in 
general, like the cherubim and seraphim of the Old Testament if 
they are not to be identified specifically with them." 13 Despite 
Stonehouse's masterful defense of his position, it rests on an as- 
sumption about the text that is certainly incorrect, and thus his 
interpretation is seriously astray. (More on this textual issue, 
and Stonehouse's opinion, will be covered below, in the discus- 
sion of 5:9). 

On the other hand, there are cogent reasons for understand- 
ing these elders as representatives of the Church in heaven (or, 
as St. John progressively unfolds throughout his prophecy, the 
earthly Church that worships in heaven). First, the mere name 
elders would indicate that these beings represent the Church, 
rather than a class of angels. Nowhere else in the Bible is the 
term elder given to anyone but men, and from earliest times it 
has stood for those who have rule and representation within the 
Church (see Ex. 12:21; 17:5-6; 18:12; 24:9-11; Num. 11:16-17; 
1 Tim. 3:1-7; Tit. 1:5-9; Heb. 13:17; James 5:14-15). Thus, the 
elders in Revelation would appear, at face value, to be represen- 
tatives of God's people, the senate sitting in council around their 
bishop. 

This consideration is reinforced by a second observation 
about these elders: They are seen sitting on thrones. We have 
already been told in this prophecy that Christians are reigning 
with Christ (1:6), that they wear crowns (2:10; 3:11), that they 
have been granted kingly authority with Him over the nations 
(2:26-27), that apostates will be forced to bow before them 
(3:9), and that they are seated with Christ on His Throne (3:21). 
Now, in chapter 4, we see elders seated on thrones; is this not a 



13. Ned B. Stonehouse, 'The Elders and the Living-Beings in the Apoca- 
lypse," in Paul Before the Areopagus, and Other New Testament Studies 
(Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1957), p. 90. 

151 



4:4 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

continuation of the teachings already presented? 

Third, we should consider the symbolism of the number 
twenty-four. In general, since twenty-four is a multiple of 
twelve, there is again a prima facie reason to assume that this 
number has something to do with the Church. Twelve is a num- 
ber Biblically associated with the people of God: Israel was 
divided into twelve tribes; and even the administration of the 
New Covenant Church is spoken of in terms of "twelve tribes," 
because the Church is the New Israel (see Matt. 19:28; Mark 
3:14-19; Acts 1:15-26; cf. James 1:1). St. John uses the word elder 
twelve times in Revelation (4:4, 10; 5:5,6, 7, 11, 14; 7:11, 13; 
ll:16;14:3;19:4).The number twenty-four is thus a "double por- 
tion" of twelve. Multiples of twelve are also built into the sym- 
bolic structure of the New Jerusalem, as we read in the final vi- 
sion of the prophecy (21:12-14): 

It had a great and high wall, with twelve gates, and at the 
gates twelve angels; and names were written on them, which are 
those of the twelve tribes of the sons of Israel. . . . 

And the wall of the city had twelve foundation stones, and 
on them were the twelve names of the twelve apostles of the 
Lamb. 

But the picture of the twenty-four elders is based on some- 
thing much more specific than the mere notion of multiplying 
twelve. In the worship of the Old Covenant there were twenty- 
four divisions of priests (1 Chron. 24) and twenty-four divisions 
of singers in the Temple (1 Chron. 25). Thus, the picture of 
twenty-four leaders of worship was not a new idea to those who 
first read the Revelation: It had been a feature of the worship of 
God's people for over a thousand years. 14 In fact, St. John has 
brought together two images that support our general conclu- 
sion: (1) The elders sit on thrones - they are kings; (2) The elders 
are twenty-four in number — they are priests. What St. John sees 
is simply the Presbytery of Heaven: the representative assembly 



14. See Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry and Services as They 
Were at the Time of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Pub- 
lishing Co., 1980), pp. 75, 86ff. Ezekiel saw twenty-five men serving in the 
Temple: the representatives of the twenty-four courses of the priesthood, plus 
the High Priest (Ezek. 8:16). 

152 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:4 

of the Royal Priesthood, the Church. 15 

That these elders are both priests and kings shows that the 
Aaronic priesthood of the Old Covenant has been superseded 
and transcended; the New Covenant priesthood, with Jesus 
Christ as High Priest, is a Melchizedekal priesthood. Thus St. 
John tells us that these priest-elders are wearing crowns, for the 
crown of the high priest has been given to all. The two inde- 
pendent testimonies from the second century that St. James in 
Jerusalem and St. John at Ephesus wore the golden crown of the 
high priest have generally been discounted by modern scholars; 16 
but these traditions may reflect the actual practice of the early 
Church. 

This brings us to another point that should be mentioned be- 
fore we move on. We have already noted (see on 3:20) several 
problems caused by the rationalistic tendencies of those groups 
that grew out of the Reformation. Unfortunately, it became 
common in those same groups to dispense with the elders' robe 
of office. Though the concern was for "spirituality," the actual 
effects were to platonize doctrine and worship, and to democra- 
tize government and ministry - further steps on the long, dusty 
road toward Reformed barrenness. As Richard Paquier reminds 
us, "Color is a teacher through sight, and it creates moods. We 
misunderstand human nature and the place of perception in our 
inner life when we downgrade this psychological factor in the 
worship of the Church." 17 God has created us this way, and the 
continuing validity of official robes follows properly from the 
patterns laid down in the Old Testament: The official character 
of the elder is emphasized by the use of official robes, in the 
same way that the judges in our culture still wear robes — a prac- 
tice, incidentally, that grew out of the practice of the Church. 

Paquier continues: "It is natural, therefore, that the man 



15. A further argument for this interpretation will be developed in the dis- 
cussion of 5:9. We will see that the song of the elders recorded there states 
clearly that they are among the redeemed — a group that does not include 
angels (Heb. 2:16). The elders, therefore, must be taken in the usual sense as 
meaning the representatives of the Church. 

16. See Dom Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (New York: The Sea- 
bury Press, [1945] 1982), p. 313; W. H . C. Frend, The Rise of Christianity 
(Philadelphia: FortresT^ress, 1984), p. 127. 

17. Richard Paquier, Dynamics of Worship: Foundations and Uses of 
Liturgy (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967), p. 143. 

153 



4:5-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

who officiates in the worship of the Church be clothed in a man- 
ner corresponding to the task assigned to him and expressing 
visibly what he does. Moreover, whoever leads in the act of wor- 
ship does not perform as a private party but as a minister of the 
Church; he is the representative of the community and the 
spokesman of the Lord. Hence, an especially prescribed vest- 
ment, a sort of ecclesiastical 'uniform,' is useful for reminding 
both the faithful and himself that in this act he is not Mr. So- 
and-So, but a minister of the Church in the midst of a multitude 
of others. What was not any less indispensable in ancient times, 
when the sense of community and of the objectivity of cultic ac- 
tion prevailed, has become in our time a very useful aid, and in- 
deed truly necessary, since individualism and subjectivity have be- 
come so deeply rooted in the piety of the Reformed churches." 18 

5-8 St. John describes the heavenly court in terms of the fa- 
miliar acoustic and visual effects which accompany the Glory- 
Cloud, as at Sinai (Ex. 19:16-19): From the Throne proceed 
flashes of lightning and voices and peals of thunder. Again, as in 
1:4-5, the imagery is shown to be the heavenly original of the 
Tabernacle structure (Heb. 8:5; 9:23): Like the Lampstand with 
its seven lamps burning within the Holy Place, there are seven 
lamps of fire burning before His Throne, the seven lamps imag- 
ing the seven Spirits of God, the Holy Spirit in His sevenfold 
fulness of activity. Here, again, is the combination of the three 
aspects of the Glory-Cloud imagery: the Voice (v. 1), the radiant 
Glory (v. 3), and the Spirit (v. 5). 

Then before the Throne St. John sees, as it were, a sea of 
glass like crystal. This is another point at which this vision in- 



18. Ibid., p. 138. As it turned out, some of those Reformation churches that 
retained the robe chose the black academic gown, perhaps partly in reaction 
against what were perceived as the excesses of the Roman Church, and in 
order to emphasize the teaching function of the minister. But, as Paquier 
points out, 'there is not a single reference to black robes in the Bible, whereas 
white robes and vestments are mentioned many times, either actually or sym- 
bolically. 

"I ndeed, if there is one color that suggests itself as an adequate expression 
of the Gospel and the evangelical divine service, certainly it is white. In the 
Bible the color white is the divine color par excellence because it symbolizes the 
holiness and perfection of God (Ps. 104:2; Dan. 7:9; Rev. 1:14; 19:11; 20:11)" 
(ibid., pp.l39f.). 

154 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:5-8 

tersects with that recorded in Ezekiel 1 . But the Throne is seen 
from two different perspectives. Whereas St. John is standing in 
the heavenly court itself, looking downupoa the "sea" of glass 
(which corresponds, in regard to Tabernacle furniture, to the 
Laver, also called the "sea": Ex. 30:17-21; 1 Kings 7:23-26), 
Ezekiel is standing at the bottom of the Glory-Cloud, looking 
up through its cone, and the "sea" at its top appears as a blue 
firmament" above him: 

And as I looked, behold, a storm wind was coming from the 
north, a great Cloud with fire flashing forth continually and a 
bright light around it, and in its midst something like glowing 
metal in the midst of the fire. And within it there were figures 
resembling four living beings. . . . Now over the heads of the 
living beings there was something like a firmament, like the awe- 
some gleam of crystal, extended over their heads. . . . And 
above the expanse that was over their heads there was something 
resembling a Throne. . . . (Ezek. 1:4-5, 22, 26) 

Another similarity to Ezekiel's vision is that St. John sees 
four living creatures standing in the middle of the Throne and 
around it, supporting the Chariot-Throne in its flight (cf. Ps. 
18:10), as do the four cherubim in Ezekiel (note that they are 
both "in the middle" and "around" the Throne; cf. the close 
connection between the Throne and the living creatures in 5:6). 
These creatures (not "beasts," as in the King James rendering) 
are full of eyes in front and behind, and appear in the forms of a 
Lion, a Bull, a Man, and an Eagle. A detailed comparison of 
these verses with Ezekiel 1 and 10 will reveal many interesting 
parallels as well as differences between the accounts (reference 
should also be made to the vision of the six-winged seraphim in 
Isaiah 6:1-4). That there are four of them indicates some rela- 
tionship to the altar-shaped earth (compare the Biblical ideas of 
four corners of the earth, four winds, four directions, the four 
rivers from Eden that watered the whole earth, and so on). 
Michael Wilcock explains: 'The cherubs of the Bible are very 
far from being chubby infants with wings and dimples. They are 
awesome creatures, visible indications of the presence of God. 



19. To Moses and the elders of Israel, the firmament-sea appeared as a 
sapphire-colored (blue) pavement (Ex. 24:10). 

155 



4:5-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

So when we are told (Ps. 18:10) that the Lord travels both on a 
cherub and on the wings of the wind, we may begin to see a link 
between the four living creatures of 4:6 and the four winds of 
7:1. We might call these cherub-creatures 'nature,' so long as we 
remember what nature really is — an immense construction 
throbbing with the ceaseless activity of God. . . . Perhaps their 
faces (4:7; Ezek. 1:10) represent his majesty, his strength, his 
wisdom, and his loftiness, and their numberless eyes his ceaseless 
watchfulness over every part of his creation. It is appropriate 
then that there should be four of them, corresponding to the 
points of the compass and the corners of the earth, and standing 
for God's world, as the twenty-four elders stand for the Church." 20 

While J ohn Calvin would have agreed with Wilcock, his 
remarks on the significance of the four faces of the cherubim are 
even more radical: "By these heads all living creatures were rep- 
resented to us. . . . These animals comprehend within them- 
selves all parts of the universe by that figure of speech by which 
a part represents the whole. Meanwhile since angels are living 
creatures we must observe in what sense God attributes to angels 
themselves the head of a lion, an eagle, and a man: for this 
seems but little in accord with their nature. But he could not bet- 
ter express the inseparable connection which exists in the 
motion of angels and all creatures. . . . We are to understand, 
therefore, that while men move about and discharge their 
duties, they apply themselves in different directions to the object 
of their pursuit, and so also do wild beasts; yet there are angelic 
motions underneath, so that neither men nor animals move them- 
selves, but their whole vigor depends on a secret inspiration." 21 

As Calvin says a few pages later, with more force, "all crea- 
tures are animated by angelic motion ," 22 This goes directly 



20. M ichael Wilcock,/ Saw Heaven Opened: The Message of Revelation 
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1975), p. 64. 

21. J ohn Calvin, Commentaries on the First Twenty Chapters of the Book of 
the Prophet Ezekiel (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1979), Vol. 1, pp. 334f. 

22. Ibid., p. 340; cf. pp. 65-74, 333-340. Calvin was attacked by his own 
translator for making these and like statements (see Vol. 1, pp. xxvf.; Vol. 2, 
pp. 421 f., 448-55, 466-68, 473 f.) Nevertheless, these thoughts are very care- 
fully worked out in the course of his exposition, and this commentary, which 
Calvin did not live to finish, represents his mature thought on thesubject It is 
one of the most fascinating volumes I have ever read, and is a rich storehouse 
of valuable insights. 

156 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:5-8 

counter to humanistic notions of "nature" and "natural law," 
but itis the Biblical teaching. The reason it sounds strange to us 
is that our worldview has been permeated by a philosophy that 
has much in common with ancient Baalism. James B. Jordan 
has written: 'The details of the Baal cult are not of much impor- 
tance to us now. It is the underlying philosophy of Baalism 
which is regnant in American education and life today, and 
which is taught in the science departments of almost all Chris- 
tian colleges today, and not just in science departments either. 
Scripture teaches that God sustains life directly, not indirectly. 
There is no such thing as Nature. God has not given any inher- 
ent power of development to the universe as such. God created 
the universe and all life by immediate actions, not by mediate 
processes. When God withdraws His Breath (which is the Holy 
Spirit, the Lord and Giver of life), death follows immediately 
(Gen. 7:22). The idea that God wound up the universe and then 
let it run its course, so that there is such a thing as Nature which 
has an intrinsic power, is Deism, not Christianity. Theistic evo- 
lution is Deism, not Christianity. To the extent to which the pro- 
cesses of Nature replace the acts of God in any system, to that 
extent the system has become Baalistic." 23 

"Because of the influence of neo-Baalism (secular human- 
ism) in our modern culture, we tend to think that God, when He 
made the world, installed certain 'natural laws' or processes that 
work automatically and impersonally. This is a Deistic, not a 
Christian, view of the world. What we call natural or physical 
law is actually a rough approximate generalization about the or- 
dinary activity of God in governing His creation. Matter, space, 
and time are created by God, and are ruled directly and actively 
by Him. His rule is called 'law.' God almost always causes things 
to be done the same way, according to covenant regularities (the 
Christian equivalent of natural laws), which covenant regulari- 
ties were established in Genesis 8:22. Science and technology are 
possible because God does not change the rules, so man can 
confidently explore the world and learn to work it. Such confi- 
dence, though, is always a form of faith, faith either in Nature 
(Baal) and natural law, or faith in God and in the trustworthi- 



23. J ames B.J ordan, Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, TX: 
Geneva Ministries, 1985), pp. 37f. 

157 



4:5-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

ness of His commitment to maintain covenant regularities." 24 

There is another aspect of the symbolism connected with the 
four living creatures that should be mentioned: their corre- 
spondence to the signs of the Zodiac. The Biblical writers were 
familiar with the same system of constellations as that which we 
know today, except that the name of the Eagle seems to have 
been usually substituted for that of the Scorpion. The reason 
for this may be that the ancient association between the Scor- 
pion and the Serpent (cf. Luke 10:17-19) led Biblical writers to 
substitute the Eagle in its place; some scholars, however, have 
argued that "in Abraham's day Scorpio was figured as an Eagle," 
according to the Chaldean system then in vogue. 25 The faces of 
the cherubim, in both Ezekiel and Revelation, are the middle 
signs in the four quarters of the Zodiac: the Lion is Leo; the 
Bull is Taurus; the Man is Aquarius, the Waterer; and the Eagle, 
as we have seen, is "Scorpio." St. John lists them here in counter- 
clockwise order, backward around the Zodiac (probably because 
he is viewing them fron above, in heaven, rather than from below, 
on earth); but when he uses them in the structure of his prophecy 
itself, he lists them in the direct order of the seasons. 26 After the 
Preamble (chapter 1), the Revelation is divided into four quarters, 
each "ruled" by one of these creatures. The first quarter (Chapters 
2-3) was ruled by Taurus; thus the emphasis on the Seven Stars, 
on the shoulder of the Bull. The second quarter (Chapters 4-7) is 
ruled by the figure of "the Lion of the Tribe of Judah," who has 
conquered to open the sealed Book. The Eagle flies in midheaven 
with cries of woe throughout the third quarter (Chapters 8-14). 
And the fourth quarter (Chapters 15-22) is governed by the Man, 
Aquarius the "Water-Pourer" (cf. the pouring out of the Chalices 
of wrath, and the River of Life flowing out from the Throne). 
There is nothing occult about any of this. Indeed, the Bible 
strongly condemns all forms of occultism (the desire for esoteric 
or autonomous wisdom), including astrological occultism 



24. I bid., p. 102. See also J ohn Calvin, Commentaries on the Last Four 
Books of Moses (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1979), Vol. 1, pp. 385-87; 
Commentary on Q Harmony of the Evangelists (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1979), Vol. 1, pp. 213-15. 

25. Richard Hinckley Allen, Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning (New 
York: Dover Publications, [1899] 1963), p. 57; cf. p. 362. 

26. Incidentally, the term Zodiac is not an occult word; it simply means cir- 
cle, and refers to the apparent path of the sun through the heavens. The twelve 
major constellations are the groups of stars arranged along the sun's path. 

158 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:5-8 

(Deut. 18:9-13; 2 Kings 23:3-5; Isa. 8:19-20; 44:24-25; 47:8-15). 27 
But this does not mean that the constellations themselves are 
evil, any more than pagan sun-worship prohibits us from seeing 
the sun as a symbol of Christ (Ps. 19:4-6; Mai. 4:2; Luke 1:78; 
Eph. 5:14). On the contrary: The constellations were created by 
God and manifest His glory (Ps. 19:1-6). They are not simply 
random groups of stars (nothing in God's universe is random, in 
the ultimate sense); rather, they have been specifically placed 
there by God (Job 9:7-9;26:13;38:31-33; Amos 5:8). 28 The ar- 
rangement of the twelve tribes of Israel around the Tabernacle 
(Num.2) corresponded to the order of the Zodiac; 29 and, like 
the cherubim, four of the tribes represented the middle signs of 
each quarter: J udah was the Lion, Reuben the Man, Ephraim 
the Bull, and Dan the Eagle. 30 The reason for the correspond- 
ences between Israel and the stars is explained by Gordon J . 
Wenham: "Scripture frequently refers to the celestial bodies as 
God's heavenly host (e.g. Deut,4:19), while the armies of Israel 
are his earthly hosts (e.g. Josh. 5:14 and throughout Num. 1). 
The earthly tabernacle was a replica of God's heavenly dwelling 
(Ex. 25:9, 40). Both were attended by the armies of the Lord. 
Finally, Genesis 37:9 compares J acob and his sons (the ancestors 
of the twelve tribes) to the sun, moon, and stars. "31 The most 



27. The best Christian refutation of the astrological delusion is in St. 
Augustine's City of God, Book V, chapters 1-11. 

28. For a study of the relationship of the constellations to the Biblical mes- 
sage, see J oseph A. Seiss, The Gospel in the Stars (Grand Rapids: Kregel Pub- 
lications, [1882] 1972). 

29. Or, as good Augustinians, we can say that the Zodiac corresponds to 
the order of the twelve tribes! 

30. SeeErnest L. Martin, The Birth of Christ Recalculated (Pasadena, CA: 
Foundation for Biblical Research, second cd., 1980), pp. 167ff.;cf. J .A. 
Thompson, Numbers, in D. GuthrieandJ .A. Motyer, eds., The New Bible 
Commentary (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., third ed., 
1970), p. 173. 

31. Gordon J . Wenham, Numbers: An Introduction and Commentary 
(Downers Grove, I L: I nter-Varsity Press, 1981), p. 65. Wenham is not referring 
to the Zodiacal constellations, but to something even more astonishing: the 
fact that the census figures of the tribes of Israel correspond to the synodic 
periods of the planets! As Wenham points out, the census numbers "affirm the 
sacred character of Israel. They remind us that God's promises to Abraham 
have been fulfilled, and that the holy people of God is called to struggle for 
him on earth as the stars fight for him in the heavenly places" (ibid.). 
Wenham's information is based on M . Barnouin, "Les recensements du Livre 
des Nombres et I 'astronomic baby\on\enne,"VetusTestamentum27, 1977, pp. 

159 



4:9-11 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

famous example of astronomical symbolism in the Bible, of 
course, is that the birth of the Messiah Himself was announced 
to the Magi by the stars (Matt. 2:2), as had been foretold (Num. 
24:17; Isa. 60:l-3). 32 

St. John next describes the worship carried on by the four 
living creatures, using a choral section to interpret for us the 
meaning of the symbols in his vision of the Throne — a device he 
repeats throughout the book. He draws our attention to the liv- 
ing creatures' six wings, in order to associate them with the sera- 
phim of Isaiah's vision: 

In the year of King Uzziah's death, I saw the Lord sitting on 
a Throne, lofty and exalted, with the train of His robe filling the 
Temple. Seraphim stood above Him, each having six wings; with 
two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet, and 
with two he flew. And one called to another and said: 
Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord of hosts, 
The whole earth is full of His glory. (Isa. 6:1-3) 

Similarly, the living creatures in the Revelation have it as 
their chief end to glorif y God and to enjoy Him forever, praising 
Him - apparently antiphonally, as Isaiah's seraphim did - for 
His holiness, His almighty power, and His eternity: Holy, Holy, 
Holy, is the Lord God, the Almighty, who was and who is and 
who is to come. This too has its counterpart in the standard 
Christian liturgy, in which the Sanctus follows the Sursum Corda: 

Officiant: Therefore with Angels and Archangels, and with 
all the company of heaven, we laud and magnify Thy glorious 
Name; evermore praising Thee and saying, 

All: HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, Lord God of Sabaoth; Heaven 
and earth are full of Thy glory; Hosanna in the highest! 

9-11 But the heavenly praise does not end with the song of 
the living creatures; for when they give glory and honor and 
thanks to God, the twenty-four elders join in with antiphonal 
(or responsive) praise themselves. They will fall down before 

280-303. This paper is available in English translation from Geneva Ministries, 
P. 0. Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. 

32. See Martin, The Birth of Christ Recalculated, pp. 4-25. 

160 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:9-11 

Him . . . and will worship Him . . . and will cast their crowns 
before the Throne, acknowledging that their authority and do- 
minion derive from Him. They go on to praise Him for His 
works in creation and history: Worthy art Thou, our Lord and 
God, to receive glory and honor and power; for Thou didst create 
all things, and because of Thy will they existed, and were created. 
To appreciate the full import of this forthright affirmation of 
the doctrine of creation, let us contrast it with a statement 
issued a few years ago by the officers of one of the largest 
churches in the United States: 

IN THE BEGINNING - CHOICE 
In the beginning God created choice. Before God made any- 
thing - earth, sky, or man - he had already made up his mind 
that man was to have a choice. Not limited choice like what color 
socks to wear today. God gave man complete power of selection, 
so complete that man could choose - or reject - God. God 
placed himself in a rather risky position when he armed man 
with such a tool. He gave man a weapon to use against God. 

Can you imagine something youVe made saying, "I dont 
want you, not even for a friend." God gave man that very op- 
tion, even though he knew what man's choice would be. God 
knew that his creation would turn away from him, hate him. But 
he also realized there is no better way to prove love than by risk- 
ing the alternative of rejection. Genuine love requires decision, 
because genuine love cannot be demanded, ordered, or even reg- 
ulated. It must be voluntary. 

This tells us something about God. God doesn't do things 
just for kicks. He must have felt, in some sense, a need of being 
loved. Do you think it is fair to conclude that God "needs" us? I 
think so. But he never downgrades the caliber of his love by try- 
ing to force us to love him. . . , 33 

Speaking charitably, this is blasphemous nonsense. The only 
honest thing about it is its lack of Bible references. There are 
many objectionable points we could consider, but the main one 
for our purposes is the issue of God's sovereignty and independ- 
ence. Did God need to create? Is God lonely? Does He stand in 
need of His creation? Let the Scriptures speak: 



33. Leaflet published c. 1978 by a church in Santa Ana, California, advertis- 
ing its Saturday Night Concerts. 

161 



4:9-11 PARTTHREE :THE SEVEN SEALS 

All the nations are as nothing before Him; they are regarded 
by Him as less than nothing and meaningless. (Isa. 40:17) 

I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is no 
one like Me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from an- 
cient times things which have not been done, saying, My purpose 
will be established, and I will accomplish all My good pleasure. 
(Isa. 46:9-10) 

The God who made the world and all things in it, since He is 
Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with 
hands; neither is He served by human hands, as though He 
needed anything, since He Himself gives to all life and breath 
and all things. (Acts 17:24-25) 34 

In their divinely sanctioned worship, the elders have pro- 
claimed the truth: The creation exists, not because God needed 
to create, or is dependent upon His creation in any way, but sim- 
ply because it was His will to create; it pleased Him to do so. 
God is sovereign, utterly independent from the creation. The 
Scriptural distinction between the Creator and the creature is 
absolute. 

The heavenly worship service here shows us what God wants 
in earthly worship. First, worship must be corporate. Biblical 
worship is not individualistic, quietistic, or solely internal. This 
is not to say that there is no place for private worship; but it 
does mean that the Biblical emphasis on corporate worship is a 
far cry from the bastardized "worship" of many evangelical, 
who see individual worship as having a priority over corporate 
worship, and who even conceive of corporate worship as simply 
an aggregation of individual worshipers. 35 Another forgotten 
aspect of the need for corporate worship is the fact that the so- 
called "worship services" in modern churches are, in reality, 
either lecture halls or three-ring circus entertainments. In both 
cases there are star performers, and there are spectators - but the 



34. One further point should receive at least a notice in a footnote: Is it true, 
as the pamphlet alleges, that "genuine love cannot be demanded, ordered, or 
even regulated"? See Deut. 6:5-6; M att. 22:37-40; E ph. 5:25; 1 J ohn 4:19. 

35. One example of this from the Reformed camp, among many that could 
be cited, is B. M. Palmer, The Theology of Prayer (Sprinkle Publications, 
[1894] 1980). This lengthy (352 pp.) work, which purports to provide "a full ar- 
ticulation of prayer in the system of grace," is wholly concerned with individ- 
ual devotions alone; it does not mention corporate prayer even once. 

162 



THE THRONE ABOVE THE SEA 4:9-11 

Church, as the Church, is not worshiping corporately. In con- 
trast, the pattern of Biblical worship is the corporate worship 
service, with full participation among the united members of the 
congregation, demonstrating a harmony of unity and diversity. 

Second, worship must be responsorial.We will see more of 
this as we proceed through the Book of Revelation - which is 
about worship as much as anything else - but this has already 
been the case with the passage we have just studied. The elders 
and the four living creatures are shown singing musical re- 
sponses back and forth, carrying on a dialogue. And, in the 
worship of the Church on earth, that is what we do (or should 
do) also. We respond liturgically to the reading of Scripture, to 
the prayers, to the singing of Psalms and hymns, to the teach- 
ing, and to the Sacraments. For this is what we see in heavenly 
worship, and our worship should be structured as far as possible 
in imitation of the heavenly pattern, according to the prayer 
Christ taught us: 'Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven" 
(Matt. 6:10). 

Third, worship must be order/y. The elders and the living 
creatures do not interrupt each other or attempt to upstage one 
another. While worship should be corporate, involving the 
entire Church, it must not be chaotic. A basic standard for wor- 
ship is laid down in 1 Cor. 14:40: "Let everything be done 
decently and in order." Charismatic tend to have certain correct 
instincts — that worship should include the whole congregation 
- but their actual practice tends toward confusion and disorder, 
with everyone individually "worshiping" all at once. The solu- 
tion, recognized in both Old and New Testaments, and by the 
Church throughout history, is to provide a common liturgy, 
with formal prayers and responses, so that the people may in- 
telligently worship together in a manner that is both corporate 
and orderly. 

Biblical public worship is very different from private or fam- 
ily worship; it is radically different from a mere Bible study 
group, as important as that may be. The Sunday worship of the 
Church is qualitatively unique: It is God's people coming into 
the palace for a formal ceremony before the Throne, an official 
audience with the King. We come to confess our faith and alleg- 
iance, to take solemn oaths, to receive forgiveness, to offer up 
prayers, to be instructed by God's officers, to eat at His table, 

163 



4:9-11 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

and to render thanksgiving for all His benefits; and we are to re- 
spond to all of this with music and singing. All of this is corpor- 
ate, and that necessarily means liturgy. This may mean certain 
complex and involved changes in our habits and patterns of 
worship. But God should have nothing less than the best. He is 
the King, and worship means serving Him. 



164 



5 
CHRISTUS VICTOR 

The Lamb and the Book (5:1-14) 

1 And I saw in the right hand of H im who sat on the Throne a 
Book written on the front and on the back, sealed up with 
seven seals. 

2 And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, 
Who is worthy to open the Book and to break its seals? 

3 And no one in heaven, or on the earth, or under the earth, 
was able to open the Book, or to look into it. 

4 And I began to weep greatly, because no one was found 
worthy to open the Book, or to look into it; 

5 and one of the elders says to me, Stop weeping; behold, the 
Lion from the tribe of J udah, the Root of David, has con- 
quered so as to open the Book and its seven seals. 

6 And I saw in the middle of the Throne and of the four living 
creatures, and in the middle of the elders, a Lamb standing, 
as if slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the 
seven Spirits of God, sent out into all the earth. 

7 And He came, and He took it out of the right hand of Him 
who sat on the Throne. 

8 And when He had taken the Book, the four living creatures 
and the twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb, hav- 
ing each one a harp, and golden bowls full of incense, which 
are the prayers of the saints. 

9 And they sing a New Song, saying: 

Worthy art Thou to take the Book, and to break its 
seals; for Thou wast slain, and didst purchase us for 
God with Thy blood out of every tribe and tongue and 
people and nation. 

10 And Thou hast made them to be kings and priests to 
our God; and they will reign upon the earth. 

11 And I looked, and I heard as it were the voice of many 

165 



5 : 1-4 part THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

angels around the Throne and the living creatures and the 
elders; and the number of them was myriads of myriads, 
and thousands of thousands, 

12 saying with a loud voice: 

Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power 
and riches and wisdom and might and honor and glory 
and blessing. 

13 And every created thing which is in heaven and on the earth 
and under the earth and on the sea, and all things in them, I 
heard saying: 

To Him who sits on the Throne, and to the Lamb, be 
blessing and honor and glory and dominion forever 
and ever. Amen. 

14 And the four living creatures kept saying, Amen. And the 
elders fell down and worshiped. 

1-4 St. John sees the One sitting on the Throne holding a 
Book . . . sealed with seven seals. As Theodor Zahn observed, 
the seven seals indicate that this document is a testament. While 
this is not the entire explanation, it is important for a proper un- 
derstanding of the Book. Zahn wrote: "The word biblion [book] 
itself permits of many interpretations, but for the readers of 
that time it was designated by the seven seals on its back beyond 
possibility of mistake. Just as in Germany before the introduc- 
tion of money-orders everybody knew that a letter sealed with 
five seals contained money, so the most simple member of the 
Asiatic churches knew that a biblion made fast with seven seals 
was a testament. When a testator dies the testament is brought 
forward, and when possible opened in the presence of the seven 
witnesses who sealed it; i.e., it was unsealed, read aloud, and ex- 
ecuted. . . . The document with seven seals is the symbol of the 
promise of a future kingdom. The disposition long ago occurred 
and was documented and sealed, but it was not yet carried out ."' 
The Book was also written on the front and on the back. 
Any Christian reader 2 would immediately have understood the 



1. Theodor Zahn, Introduction to the New Testament, Vol. Ill, pp. 393 f.; 
quoted in G. R. Beasley-Murray, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., revised ed., 1978), p. 121. 

2. In saying this, lam assuming that the average Christian of the first cen- 
tury had more sense than the average commentator of the twentieth. There is 
hardly a single commentary that even gives theTen Commandments a passing 
glance in this connection. 

166 



CHRISTUS VICTOR 5:1-4 

significance of this description, for it is based on the description 
of the Ten Commandments. The two tablets of the Testimony, 
which were duplicate copies, 3 were inscribed on both front and 
back (Ex. 32:15). An analogue of this is found in the suzerainty 
treaties of the Ancient Near East: A victorious king (the suzer- 
ain) would impose a treaty/covenant upon the conquered king 
(the vassal) and all those under the vassal's authority. Two 
copies of the treaty were drawn up (as in modern contracts), and 
each party would place his copy of the contract in the house of 
his god, as a legal document testif ying to the transaction. In the 
case of Israel, of course, the Lord was both Suzerain and God; 
so both copies of the Covenant were placed in the Tabernacle 
(Ex. 25:16,21; 40:20; Deut. 10:2). 

Meredith Kline explains: "The purpose of Israel's copy of the 
covenant was that of a documentary witness (Deut. 31:26). It 
was witness to and against Israel, reminding of obligations 
sworn to and rebuking for obligations violated, declaring the 
hope of covenant beatitude and pronouncing the doom of the 
covenant curses. The public proclamation of it was designed to 
teach the fear of the Lord to all Israel, especially to the children 
(Deut. 31:13; cf. Ps. 78:5ff.). . . . Considered in relation to the 
divine oath and promise, Yahweh's duplicate table of the cove- 
nant served a purpose analogous to that of the rainbow in his 
covenant with Noah (Gen. 9:13-16). Beholding this table, he re- 
membered his oath to his servants and faithfully brought to pass 
the promised blessing."4 

We have seen that St. John has organized this prophecy in 
terms of the established covenant structure. More than this, 
much of the specific information in Revelation has indicated 
that the idea of covenant is central to its message. The book 
presents itself from the outset as part of the Canon, primarily 
written to be read in the liturgy (1:3). Tabernacle imagery is used 
in the opening Doxology (1:4-5), and the Church is declared to 
be constituted as the new Kingdom of priests, as Israel had been 



3. See Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Struc- 
ture of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
1963), pp. 13ff.;idem, The Structure of Biblical Authority (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., second cd., 1975), pp. 113ff. 

4. Kline, Treaty of the Great King, pp. 21, 24; The Structure of Biblical 
Authority, pp. 123 f., 127. 

167 



5:1-4 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

at Sinai (1:6). The theme of the book, stated in 1:7, is Christ's 
coming in the Glory-Cloud; then, almost immediately, St. John 
uses three words that almost always occur in connection with 
covenant-making activity: Spirit, Day, and Voice (1:10). The fol- 
lowing vision of Christ as the glorious High Priest (1:12-20) 
combines many images from the Old Testament - the Cloud, the 
Day of the Lord, the Angel of the Lord, the Creator and uni- 
versal Sovereign, the Son of Man/Second Adam, the Con- 
queror of the nations, the Possessor of the Church - all of 
which are concerned with the prophecies of the coming of the 
New Covenant. The visionis followed by Christ's own message 
to the churches, styled as a recounting of the history of the Cov- 
enant (Chapters 2-3). Then, in Chapter 4, St. J ohn sees the 
Throne, supported by the Cherubim and surrounded by the 
royal priesthood, all singing God's praises to the accompan- 
iment of Sinai-like lightning and voices and thunder. We should 
not be surprised to find this magnificent array of covenant- 
making imagery culminating in the vision of a testament/treaty 
document, written on front and back, in the hand of Him who 
sits on the Throne. The Book is nothing less than the Testament 
of the resurrected and ascended Christ: the New Covenant. 

But the coming of the New Covenant implies the passing 
away of the Old Covenant, and the judgment of apostate Israel. 
As we saw in the Introduction, the Biblical prophets spoke in 
terms of the covenantal treaty structure, acting as prosecuting 
attorneys on behalf of the divine Suzerain, bringing covenant 
lawsuit against Israel. The imagery of the document inscribed 
on both sides is used in the prophecy of Ezekiel, on which St. 
John has modeled his prophecy. Ezekiel tells of receiving a scroll 
containing a list of judgments against Israel: 

Then He said to me, "Son of man, I am sending you to the 
sons of Israel, to a rebellious people who have rebelled against 
Me; they and their fathers have transgressed against Me to this 
very day. ..." Then I looked, and behold, a hand was extended 
to me; and 10, a Book was in it. When He had spread it out be- 
fore me, it was written on the front and back; and written on it 
were lamentations, mourning and woe. (Ezek. 2:3-10) 

As St. John sees the opening of the New Covenant, there- 
fore, he will also see the curses of the Old Covenant fulfilled on 

168 



CHRISTUS VICTOR 5:5-7 

the apostate Covenant people. This conclusion becomes clearer 
as we look at the overall movement of the prophecy. The Seven 
Seals of the Book are broken in order to reveal the Book's con- 
tents; but the breaking of the Seventh Seal initiates the sounding 
of the Seven Trumpets (8:1-2). The final vision of the Trumpets- 
section closes with a horrifying scene of a great Vintage, in 
which human "grapes of wrath" are trampled and the whole 
Land is flooded with a torrent of blood (14:19-20). This leads 
directly into the final section of Revelation, in which St. John sees 
the blood from the Winepress being poured out from the Seven 
Chalices of wrath (16:1-21). It would seem, therefore, that we are 
meant to understand the Seven Chalices as the content of the Sev- 
enth Trumpet, "the last Woe" to fall upon the Land (cf. 8:13; 
9:12; 11:14-15; 12:12). All of these- Seals, Trumpets, and Chalices 
— are the contents of the seven-sealed Book, the New Covenant. 
But there is a crisis: No one in all of creation -in heaven, or 
on the earth, or under the earth — is able (or, as St. John ex- 
plains, worthy) to open the Book, or to look into it. No one can 
fulfill the conditions required of the Mediator of the New Cove- 
nant. All previous mediators - Adam, Moses, David, and the 
rest — had ultimately proved inadequate for the task. No one 
could take away sin and death; for all have sinned, and contin- 
ually fall short of the Glory of God (Rem. 3:23). The sacrifice of 
animals could not really take away sins, for such a thing is im- 
possible (Heb.l0:4); and the high priest who offered up the sac- 
rifices was a sinner himself, "beset with weakness" (Heb. 5:1-3; 
7:27) and having to be replaced after his death (7:23). No one 
could be found to guarantee a better covenant. With the pro- 
phetic yearning and sadness of the Old Covenant Church, St. 
John began to weep greatly. The New Covenant had been 
offered by the One sitting on the Throne, but no one was worthy 
to act on behalf of both God and man to ratify the Covenant. 
The seven-sealed Book would remain locked. 

5-7 St. John is comforted by one of the elders, who says (as 
it reads literally): Stop weeping; behold, He has conquered! The 
Church thus preaches the Gospel to St. John; and it seems as if 
the elder is so excited about his message that he blurts out the 
climax before he even explains who has conquered. He goes on 
to describe Christ the Conqueror: the Lion from the tribe of 

169 



5:5-7 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

Judah, the strong and powerful fulfillment of Jacob's ancient 
prophecy to his fourth son: 

You are a lion's cub, O J udah; 

You return from the prey, my son. 

Like a lion he crouches and lies down, 

Like a lioness - who dares to rouse him? 

The scepter will not depart from J udah, 

Nor the ruler's staff from between his feet, 

Until He comes to whom it belongs, 

And the obedience of the nations is His. (Gen. 49:9-10) 

It was David, the conquering Lion of Judah of the Old 
Covenant, to whom God revealed both the plan of the Temple 
(lChron. 28:11-19) and the plan of the everlasting covenant, the 
"Charter for Humanity" by which the coming Priest-King would 
bring the blessing of Abraham to all nations (2 Sam. 7:18-29; 
23:2-5; 1 Chron. 17:16-27; Ps. 16; 110; Acts 2:25 -36). 5 At last 
David's greater Son came and conquered, establishing everlast- 
ing dominion and opening the Covenant. Embodying and ful- 
filling all its promises, He is the One "to whom it belongs." 

Christ is also called the Root of David - a strange expres- 
sion, to our way of thinking. We can more easily understand 
Isaiah's term: "a shoot from the stem of Jesse" (Isa. 11:1). As a 
descendant of Jesse and David, Jesus could be called a "branch" 
(Jer.23:5;Zech.3:8); but how could He be called the Root? Our 
perplexity originates in our non-Biblical views of how history 
works. We are accustomed to thinking of history as if it were a 
cosmic Rube Goldberg machine: Trip a lever at one end, and a 
series of domino-like thingamajigs and whatsits bang into each 
other, at long last producing a whatchamacallit at the far end of 
the machine. By pure cause and effect, each event causes other 
events, in direct chronological succession. 

Now, this is true - but it is not the whole truth. In fact, taken 
alone and autonomously, it is not true at all, for such a thesis is 
evolutionary in its assumptions, rather than Biblical. History is 



5. See Walter C. Kaiser J r., 'The Blessing of David: The Charter for Human- 
it y," in J ohn H . Skilton ed., The LQwand the Prophets: Old Testament Studies 
Prepared in Honor of Oswald Thompson A His (Presbyterian and Reformed 
Publishing Co., 1974), pp. 298-318. 

170 



CHRISTUS VICTOR 5:5-7 

not simply a matter of the past causing the future; it is also true 
that the future causes the past, as R. J. Rushdoony explains: 
"The movement of time, according to the Bible, is from eternity, 
since it is created by God and moves out of and in terms of His 
eternal decree. . . . Because time is predestined, and because its 
beginning and end are already established, time does not de- 
velop in evolutionary fashion from past to present to future. In- 
stead, it unfolds from future to present to past." 6 

A simple illustration might help us understand this. Let us 
say someone finds you packing a sack lunch on a warm Saturday 
morning, and asks the reason for it. You answer, "Because I'm 
going to have a picnic at the park today." What has happened? 
In a sense, the future- the planned picnic - has determined the 
past. Because you wanted a picnic at the park, you then planned 
a lunch. Logically, the picnic preceded, and caused, the making 
of the lunch, even though it followed it chronologically. In the 
same way, God desired to glorify Himself in Jesus Christ; there- 
fore He created Jesse and David, and all the other ancestors of 
Christ's human nature, in order to bring His Son into the world. 
The Root of David's very existence was the Son of David, Jesus 
Christ. The "effect" determined the "cause"! 

The Lord Jesus Christ is thus presented in the most radical 
way possible as the Center of all history, the divine Root as well 
as the Branch, the Beginning and the End, Alpha and Omega. 
And it is as the conquering Lion and the determining Root that 
He has prevailed so as to open the Book and its seven seals. 

St. John turns to see the One who is described in this way - 
and, instead of seeing a Lion or a Root, he sees a Lamb standing 
before the Throne. This is the pattern we first noticed at 1:11, in 
which John first hears, then sees. Obviously, the One St. John 
heard about in verse 5 is identical with the One he now beholds 
in verse 6. The Lion is the Lamb. 



6. RousasJ ohn Rushdoony, The Biblical Philosophy of History (Nutley, 
NJ : Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1969), p. 11; cf. Rushdoony, 
The One and the Many, p. 145; St. Augustine, The City of God, Bk. XII, 
Chap. 13-15; Nathan R. Wood, The Secret of the Universe (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing CO., [1936] 1955), pp. 43-45. 

7. One of the clearest statements of this idea is in Gordon H . Clark, Biblical 
Predestination (Nutley, NJ : Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 
1969), esp. pp. 18-30. 

171 



5:5-7 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

In what sense is Jesus Christ a Lamb? The passage is not re- 
ferring to Jesus in His Nature - He is not "lamblike" in the sense 
of being gentle, sweet, or mild, as some would falsely under- 
stand this text. 8 Christ is called a Lamb, not in view of His Per- 
son (which pop-theology degrades to the modern concept of 
"personality" anyway), but in view of His work. He is the Lamb 
that was slain, "who takes away the sin of the world" (John 
1:29). Thus, the center of history is the finished, sacrificial work 
of Christ. The foundation for His mediatorial kingship (Christ 
as the Lion) is His mediatorial atonement (Christ as the Lamb). 
It is because of His sacrifice that He has been exalted to the 
place of supreme rule and authority. Christ has attained victory 
through His sacrificial suffering and death on our behalf. 

St. John emphasizes this by his specific language: a Lamb 
standing, as if slain. Philip Barrington suggests that the Greek 
word standing (hestekos) is "a rough Greek translation of the 
Hebrew Tamid, which means 'standing' or 'continual,' and re- 
fers to the daily burnt-offering in the Temple. It is the regular 
technical term, and forms the title of the section of the Mishnah 
which deals with that sacrifice. The Lamb of the Tamidis an in- 
telligible expression, which might well have been turned into the 
Arnion Hestekos of the Greek. The Greek word Hestekos does 
not mean 'continual,' but only 'standing' in the literal sense; but 
itmight be a rough equivalent like Christos (smeared), which 
stands for Messiah. Arnion Hestekos might thus be 'baboo' 
Greek for Lamb of the Sacrifice. 

"The word Arnion has also aroused discussion. Our Lord is 
called Lamb of God in the fourth gospel (1:29), just as he is here 
called Lamb of the Tamid; but the two words are different, 
Arnion here and Amnos in the gospel. It is possible that while 
Amnosis the more common and natural word for Lamb, Arnion 
Hestekos might be a technical term of the Jewish Temple. . . . " 9 

St. John continues the symbolic imagery: Christ the Lamb 
has seven horns. The horn in Scripture is an understandable 
symbol for strength and power (cf. Ps. 75:10); more than this, 



8. Hal Lindsey speaks in this connection of Christ's "lamblike meekness 
and gentleness" in There's a New World Coming: A Prophetic Odyssey 
(Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1973), p. 94. 

9. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of The Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), pp. 119f. 

172 



CHRISTUS victor 5:5-7 

however, the thinking of the Biblically literate reader would 
have been jogged into recalling the seven rams' horns that were 
used to herald the judgment of God on His enemies and the vic- 
tory and salvation of the covenant people in the historic battle 
of Jericho (Josh. 6:2-5). In the same way, the great Sacrificial 
Lamb, to whom all other sacrifices pointed, now provides 
power and strength and victory for His people in their war for 
dominion over the earth. It is the definitive victory of Christ that 
guarantees the Church's progressive victories and ultimate do- 
minion of all the territory assigned to her — which, in this age, is 
not merely Palestine but the entire world (Matt. 28:18-20). 

The Lamb also has seven eyes, which are the seven Spirits of 
God sent out into all the earth (cf. Zech. 6:5). In order to under- 
stand this, we have to go back to Genesis 1, where we find the 
first mention of the Spirit: hovering over the earth, brooding 
over it, forming and filling it, calling forth life. As the creation 
progresses, the Spirit performs seven acts of seeing - the seven- 
fold Spirit's eyes, if you will. Seven times we are told that "God 
saw that it was good" (Gen. 1:4, 10, 12, 18, 21, 25, 31). As God 
was creating His world, He was also judging it, assessing and 
approving it, until the final, climactic judgment was made as the 
prelude to the beginning of the seventh day. I0 Here in Revela- 
tion Christ is presented as the Center of history, the Overcomer 
who receives the New Covenant for men; and, as such, He is 
seen to be both Creator and Judge, with fullness of knowledge 
through His immeasurable possession of the seeing and discern- 
ing Spirit (Jn. 3:34). Even in the beginning, when the Spirit went 
forth to fashion the earth and to assess it, He "proceeded from 
the Father and the Son. " Christ's understanding of creation and 
history originates not from history itself but from the fact that 
He is both the Creator and Redeemer of the world. Thus, on the 
basis of His Person, His work, and His exalted position as 
Savior and World-Ruler, Jesus Christ ascended to heaven, 
stepped forward to the Throne of His Father, and took the 
Book out of the right hand of Him who sat upon the Throne. 
This is how the prophet Daniel described it: 



10. See Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1980), pp. 107ff. 

173 



5:8-10 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

I kept looking in the night visions, 

And behold, with the clouds of heaven 

One like a Son of Man was coming, 

And He came up to the Ancient of Days 

And was presented before Him. 

And to Him was given dominion, 

Glory and a Kingdom, 

That all the peoples, nations, and men of every language 

Might serve Him. 

His dominion is an everlasting dominion 

Which will not pass away; 

And His Kingdom is one 

Which will not be destroyed. (Dan. 7:13-14) 

The central message of the Bibleis salvation through J esus 
Christ, the Mediator of the New Covenant. Apart from His 
work, through which He acquired and eternally possesses the 
Covenant, there is no hope for mankind. He has overwhelmingly 
conquered so as to open the Treaty of the Great King; and 
through Him we too are more than conquerors. 

8-10 At this, the company of saints and angels in heaven 
burst forth into praise: The four living creatures and the twenty- 
four elders fell down before the Lamb, prostrating themselves in 
adoration as they prepare to worship Himin song, having each 
one a harp. Another important aspect of the scene involves the 
golden bowls full of incense, which are (i.e., which represent, or 
set forth symbolically) the prayers of the saints (cf. Ps. 141:2; 
Luke l:10).Geerhardus Vos explained: "The symbolism lies 
partly in that the smoke is, as it were, the refined quintessence of 
the offering, partly in the ascending manner of the same. That 
the altar of incense has its place nearest to the curtain before the 
'holy of holies' signifies the religious specificness of prayer as 
coming nearest to the heart of God. The offering was of a per- 
petual character. The notion of the grateful smell of the burning 
incense in the nostrils of J ehovah is somewhat removed from 
our own taste of religious imagery, but should not on that ac- 
count be overlooked, sinceitis not in the slightest degree felt to 
be inappropriate by the Hebrew sense of religion. "11 



11. GeerhardusVos, Biblical Theology: Old and New Testaments (Grand 
Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1948), p. 168. 

174 



CHRISTUS victor 5:8-10 

The living creatures and the elders then sing a New Song, 
and again a choral section is used to explain the symbols. In- 
deed, our interpretation is confirmed by the expression St. J ohn 
uses here. The New Song is mentioned seven times in the Old 
Testament (Ps. 33:3; 40:3; 96:1; 98:1; 144:9; 149:1; Isa. 42:10), 
always in reference to God's redemptive/creative acts in history. 
The New Song celebrates the making of the Covenant and fore- 
tells the coming of Christ to bring salvation to the nations and 
universal victory to the godly: 

O sing to the Lord a New Song, 

For He has done wonderful things, 

His right hand and His holy arm have gained the victory for Him. 

The Lord has made known His salvation: 

He has revealed his righteousness in the sight of the nations. 

He has remembered His lovingkindness and His faithfulness to 

the house of Israel; 
All the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God. 
(Ps. 98:1-3) 

Sing to the Lord a New Song, 

Sing His praise from the end of the earth! . . . 

Let them give glory to the Lord, 

And declare His praise in the coastlands. 

The Lord will go forth like a warrior, 

He will arouse His zeal like a man of war. 

He will utter a shout, yes, He will raise a war cry. 

He will prevail against His enemies. (Isa. 42:10-13) 

Each time a new stage in redemptive history is reached in the 
Bible (such as the Exodus, the founding of the theocratic king- 
dom, etc.), there is a corresponding period of canonical revela- 
tion; as Geerhardus Vos said, "Revelation follows events." 12 
More specifically, the appearance of canonical Scripture attends 
God's victorious redemption of His people, as Meredith G. 
Kline points out with regard to 'the birth of the Bible": "In the 
midst of a fallen world and in the face of Satanic hostility mani- 
fested in various historical guises, an elect people of God could 
not attain to kingdom status apart from redemptive judgments 
delivering them from the power of the adversary. Only when the 



12. Ibid., p. 203. 

175 



5:8-10 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

Lord God had accomplished this SOteric triumph would the 
way be prepared for him to promulgate his kingdom-treaty, set- 
ting his commandments among his elect people and ordering 
their kingdom existence under the dominion of his sovereign 
will. . . . 

"Covenantal revelation was already addressed to Abraham, 
Isaac, and Jacob, with their households, offering them the king- 
dom in promise. But Scripture required for its appearance more 
than merely the promise of a kingdom. It was necessary that the 
promise and oath given to the patriarchs be fulfilled; the chosen 
people must actually attain to nationhood. Not until God had 
created the kingdom-community of Israel brought forth from 
Pharaoh's tyranny to the Sinai assembly could he issue canon- 
ical covenant of the biblical type. The appearance of canonical 
Scripture thus had to await the exodus victory of Yahweh. That 
victory signalized the fulness of time for the birth of God's 
treaty Word. 

"The scheduling of the nativity of the written Word at pre- 
cisely that historical juncture points us to the peculiar quality of 
canonical Scripture. Originating as it does in consequence of an 
awesome display of Yahweh' s power in salvation and judgment, 
in accordance with prophetic promises given tc the patriarchs, 
Scripture from the outset bears the character of a word of 
triumphal fulfillment. It is the incontestable declaration that the 
name of Israel's God is Yahweh, mighty Lord of the covenant. 
Although the Mosaic kingdom established at Sinai was itself still 
only provisional and promissory in relation to the Messianic re- 
alities of the New Testament age, yet unmistakably the Old Tes- 
tament Word of God which heralded the Israelite kingdom was 
for the pre-Messianic stage of redemptive history a word of 
promises manifestly fulfilled and of Yahweh' s triumphant king- 
ship decisively and dramatically displayed. From its first emer- 
gence in the sequel of victory, therefore, canonical Scripture 
confronts men as a divine word of triumph ." 13 

What Sinai showed in provisional form, Calvary and Olivet 
revealed definitively: the victorious redemption of God's elect 
people in the New Covenant, when the Lion of the Tribe of 



13. Meredith G. Kline, The Structure of Biblical Authority (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., second cd., 1975), pp. 77ff. 

176 



CHRISTUS VICTOR 5:8-10 

Judah conquered so as to open the Book. And because Jesus 
Christ obtained the New Covenant for His people, He commis- 
sioned the writing of the canonical Scriptures of the New Testa- 
ment as the decisive and dramatic display of" His triumphant 
kingship, His "divine word of triumph." 

Along with the new written revelation, this new and final 
stage of redemptive history brought by the New Covenant called 
for a New Song, a new liturgical response by God's worshiping 
assembly. Just as the previous epochs in covenantal history 
evoked a New Song, lA the definitive establishment of the new 
nation with its new kingdom-treaty necessitated a new worship, 
one that would be a true fulfillment of the old, a transcending of 
all that it foreshadowed. The new wine of the New Covenant 
could not be contained in the wineskins of the Old; the new re- 
demption required for its full and proper expression the New 
Song of the Christian liturgy. This is exactly what the New Song 
proclaims as its basis: 

Kingdom-Treaty: Worthy art Thou to take the Book, and to 
break its seals. 

Redemption: For Thou wast slain, and didst purchase us for 
God with Thy blood. 

Nationhood: Thou hast made them to be a Kingdom and 
priests to our God. 

Dominion: And they will reign on the earth. 

One aspect of the Song has raised a serious interpretive 
issue: As we noted at 4:4, Ned Stonehouse (with a host of 
others) held that the twenty-four elders are a class of angels. The 
basis for Stonehouse's opinion boils down to the fact that one 
Greek New Testament manuscript contains a textual variation 
which, he claimed, indicates this. Whereas most manuscripts 
read that Christ purchased us, the variant reading preferred by 
Stonehouse says that Christ purchased men. The difference, ob- 
viously, would be that the singers in the first case are definitely 



14. Songs produced by the Exodus redemption include those recorded in 
Ex. 15, Deut. 32, and Ps. 90; the new organization of thetheocratic kingdom 
under a human ruler, and the events leading to the establishment of the Tem- 
ple, resulted in the Psalter (the definitive collection of "new songs" under the 
Old Covenant). 

177 



5:8-10 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

identified as among the redeemed, while the singers in the sec- 
ond reading are not necessarily including themselves among 
those purchased by Christ's blood. 

Unfortunately for Stonehouse's interpretation, there are two 
facts which, at the outset, argue against it. In the first place, 
even if all the manuscripts contained Stonehouse's preferred 
reading, it would not prove his case; Stonehouse was simply 
making an assumption that may (but does not necessarily) fol- 
low from his premise. (After all, any believer could still pray for 
"the Church" or "God's people" without excluding himself; the 
mere fact that the elders thank God for redeeming "men" would 
not necessarily mean that they are not redeemed themselves.) 

Secondly, however, of the hundreds of manuscripts contain- 
ing the Book of Revelation, only one carries this extremely dub- 
ious reading. The variant is not found in any "family" of manu- 
scripts, and certainly not in anything that could be called a man- 
uscript "tradition"; it occurs in only one solitary manuscript. To 
base an interpretation on such a shaky foundation is, to say the 
least, an exceedingly subjective and precarious method of Bible 
study. 

Without a doubt, the traditional reading ("us") is the true 
one. But saying this seems to raise two further problems: (1) The 
four living creatures, who do not seem to represent the Church, 
are said to be singing this song; (2) the song shifts to the third 
person between verses 9 and 10. In verse 9 we read: "Thou didst 
purchase us"; and in verse 10 we read: "Thou hast made them to 
be kings . . . and they will reign." Actually, these two problems 
solve each other. It is apparently an example of what we have 
already seen in this book, and what will become more familiar 
as we progress through it: antiphonal praise. This pattern of 
choral responses continues in this chapter (cf. v. 11-14). A proba- 
ble outline of this portion of the heavenly liturgy would be as 
follows: 

Elders and Living Creatures: Worthy art Thou to take the 
Book and to break its seals. 

Elders: For Thou wast slain, and didst purchase us for God 
with Thy blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and na- 
tion. 

Living Creatures: And Thou hast made them to be kings and 

178 



CHRISTUS VICTOR 5:11-14 

priests to our God; and they will reign upon the earth. 15 

Christ has purchased His people out of the nations, not only 
to redeem them from sin, but to enable them to fulfill God's ori- 
ginal Dominion Mandate for man. As the Second Adam, Christ 
sets His New Creation the task Adam forfeited — this time, how- 
ever, on the unshakeable foundation of His death, resurrection, 
and ascension. Salvation has a purpose, a saving to as well as a 
saving from. Christ has made His people to be kings and priests 
to our God, and has guaranteed their destiny: They will reign 
upon the earth. This shows us the direction of history: The re- 
deemed of the Lord, already a nation of kingly priests, are mov- 
ing toward the complete dominion God had planned as His ori- 
ginal program for man. In Adam it had been lost; Jesus Christ, 
the Second Adam, has redeemed us and restored us to our royal 
priesthood, so that we will reign upon the earth. Through the 
work of Christ the definitive victory over Satan has been won. 
We are promised increasing victories, and increasing rule and 
dominion, as we bring the Gospel and law of the great King to 
fruition throughout the world. 

11-14 In response to the praise of the four living creatures 
and the twenty-four elders, the entire choir of angels, compos- 
ing myriads of myriads, 16 and thousands of thousands, joins in 
with a loud voice, proclaiming that the Lamb that was slain is, 
on the basis of His Person and work, worthy to inherit all things 
(the seven enumerated items indicating fullness) in heaven and 
earth: power and riches and wisdom and might and honor and 
glory and blessing. And, as if in joyful answer to this great dec- 
laration of Christ's universal inheritance, the whole (fourfold) 
creation responds with praise, as a climax to this section of the 
liturgy. Every created thing that is a) in heaven and b) on the 
earth and c) under the earth and d) in the sea, and all things in 
them - all of created reality becomes part of the cosmic chorus, 



15. This outline is also suggested by Moses Stuart, A Commentary on the 
Apocalypse, 2 vols, (Andover: Allen, Merrill and Wardwell, 1845), Vol. 2, p. 
134. 

16. Literally, a myriad is 10,000; but it is often, especially in the plural, used 
in a more vague sense to mean "a very large number." Myriads of myriads ob- 
viously means simply "countless thousands." 

179 



5:11-14 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

singing: To Him who sits on the Throne, and to the Lamb, be a) 
blessing and b) honor and c) glory and d) dominion forever and 
ever. One day, all of creation will acknowledge Christ as Lord 
(Phil. 2:10-11); in principle, however, this is already established 
by the sacrifice and victory of the Lamb. Again, St. J ohn has re- 
vealed to us the goal of history as the universal recognition of 
Christ's Lordship and the eternal glory of God through Jesus 
Christ. 

The Church in St. John's day was about to experience a time 
of severe testing and persecution. Already they were seeing 
what, in a sane age, could scarcely be imagined: a union be- 
tween Israel and the antichristian Beast of Rome. These Chris- 
tians needed to understand history as something not ruled by 
chance or evil men or even the devil, but ruled instead from 
God's Throne by Jesus Christ. They needed to see that Christ 
was reigning now, that He had already wrested the world from 
Satan's grasp, and that even now all things in heaven and earth 
were bound to acknowledge Him as King. They needed to see 
themselves in the true light: Not as forgotten troops in a lonely 
outpost fighting a losing battle, but as kings and priests already, 
waging war and overcoming, predestined to victory, with the ab- 
solute assurance of conquest and dominion with the High King 
over the earth. They needed the Biblical philosophy of history: 
that all of history, created and controlled by God's personal and 
total government, is moving inexorably toward the universal 
dominion of the Lord Jesus Christ. The new and final age of his- 
tory has arrived; the New Covenant has come. Behold, He has 
conquered! 



180 



6 
IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 

St. John brings us now to the breaking of the Seven Seals of 
the Book (six of the Seals are broken in Chapter 6; the Seventh 
Seal is broken in 8:1, and is connected to the Seven Trumpets). 
We have seen that the Book represents the treaty document of 
the New Covenant, the opening of which will result in the de- 
struction of apostate Israel (see on 5:1-4). What then does the 
breaking of the Seals represent? Some have thought this to sig- 
nif y a chronological reading through the Book, and that the 
events depicted are in a straight, historical order. This is unlikely 
for two reasons. First, the Seals seem to be on the outside edge 
of the Book (which is in the form of a scroll): one cannot really 
begin to read the Book until all the Seals are broken. The 
Seventh Seal, consisting of a call to action by the blowing of the 
Seven Trumpets, actually opens the Book so that we may read 
its contents. 

Second, a careful reading of the events shown by each Seal 
reveals that they are not listed in chronological order. For exam- 
ple, in the Fifth Seal - after all the havoc wreaked by the Four 
Horsemen - the martyrs calling for judgment are told to wait. 
But the judgment is immediately poured out in the Sixth Seal, 
the entire creation "unseam'd from the nave to the chaps." Yet, 
after all this, God commands the angels to withhold judgment 
until the servants of God are protected (7:3). Obviously, the 
Seals are not meant to represent a progressive chronology. It is 
more likely that they reveal the main ideas of the Book's con- 
tents, the major themes of the judgments that came upon Israel 
during the Last Days, from a.d. 30-70. 

R. H. Charles pointed out the close structural similarity be- 
tween the Six Seals of this chapter and the events of the so-called 

181 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

Little Apocalypse recorded in the Synoptic Gospels. As his out- 
line (adapted below) demonstrates, "they present practically the 
same material." ] 

Revelation 6 

1. War (v. 1-2) 
2. International strife (v. 3-4) 

3. Famine (v. 5-6) 

4. Pestilence (v. 7-8) 

5. Persecution (v. 9-11) 

6. Earthquake; De-creation (v. 12-17) 

Matthew 24 

1. Wars (v. 6) 

2. International strife (v. 7a) 

3. Famines (v. 7b) 

4. Earthquakes (v. 7c) 

5. Persecutions (v. 9-13) 

6. De-creation (v. 15-31) 

Mark 13 

1. Wars (v. 7) 

2. International strife (v. 8a) 

3. Earthquakes (v. 8b) 

4. Famines (v. 8c) 

5. Persecutions (v. 9-13) 

6. De-creation (v. 14-27) 

Luke 21 

1. Wars (v. 9) 

2. International strife (v. 10) 

3. Earthquakes (v. ha) 

4. Plagues and famines (v. lib) 

5. Persecution (v. 12-19) 

6. De-creation (v. 20-27) 

This is very perceptive of Charles, and of the manv commen- 
tators who have followed his lead. What is astonishing is that 
they should fail to see St. John's purpose in presenting "the 
same material" as the Synoptic writers: to prophesy the events 
leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem. While all readily ad- 



1. R. H. Charles, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Revelation 
of St. John, 2 vols. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1920), Vol. 1, p. 158. 

182 



INTHE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 

mit that the Little Apocalypse is a prophecy against Israel (see 
Matt. 23:29-39; 24:1-2, 15-16, 34; Mark 13:2, 14, 30; Luke 
21:5-6, 20-24, 32), few seem able to make the obvious connec- 
tion: The Big Apocalypse is a prophecy against Israel as well! 

The Four Horsemen (6:1-8) 

1 And I saw that the Lamb broke one of the Seven Seals, and I 
heard one of the four living creatures saying as with a voice 
of thunder: Come! 

2 And I looked, and behold, a white horse, and He who sat on 
it had a Bow; and a crown was given to Him; and He went 
out conquering, and to conquer. 

3 And when He broke the Second Seal, I heard the second liv- 
ing creature saying: Come ! 

4 And another, a blood-red horse, went out; and to him who 
sat on it, it was granted to take peace from the Land, and 
that men should slay one another; and a great sword was 
given to him. 

5 And when He broke the Third Seal, I heard the third living 
creature saying: Come! And I looked, and behold, a black 
horse; and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand. 

6 And I heard a Voice in the center of the four living creatures 
saying: A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of 
barley for a denarius; and do not harm the oil and the wine. 

7 And when He broke the Fourth Seal, I heard the voice of the 
fourth living creature saying: Come! 

8 And I looked, and behold, a green horse; and he who sat on 
it had the name Death; and Hades was following with him. 
And authority was given to him over a fourth of the Land, 
to kill with sword and with famine and with death and by 
the wild beasts of the Land. 

The central Old Testament passage behind the imagery of 
the "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" is Zechariah 6:1-7, 
which pictures the Four Winds as God's chariots driven by His 
agents, who go back and forth patrolling the earth. Following 
and imitating the action of the Spirit (see 5:6), they are God's 
means of controlling history (see below at 7:1, where the Four 
Winds are identified with, and controlled by, angels; cf. also Ps. 
18:10, where the "wings of the wind" are connected with 
"cherubs"). Biblical symbolism views the earth (and especially 
the Land of Israel) as God's four-cornered altar, and thus often 

183 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

represents wide-sweeping, national judgments in a fourfold 
manner. The Horsemen, therefore, show us God's means of 
controlling and bringing judgment upon the disobedient nation 
of Israel. 

Milton Terry's comments are helpful: "The true interpreta- 
tion of these first four seals is that which recognizes them as a 
symbolic representation of the 'wars, famines, pestilences, and 
earthquakes' which Jesus declared would be 'the beginning of 
sorrows' in the desolation of Jerusalem (Matt. 24:6-7; Luke 
21:10-11, 20). The attempt to identify each separate figure with 
one specific event misses both the spirit and method of apoca- 
lyptic symbolism. The aim is to give a fourfold and most im- 
pressive picture of that terrible war on Jerusalem which was des- 
tined to avenge the righteous blood of prophets and apostles 
(Matt. 23:35-37), and to involve a 'great tribulation,' the like of 
which had never been before (Matt. 24:21). Like the four succes- 
sive but closely connected swarms of locusts in Joel 1 :4; like the 
four riders on different colored horses in Zechariahl:8, 18, and 
the four chariots drawn by as many different colored horses in 
Zechariah 6:1-8, these four sore judgments of Jehovah move 
forth at the command of the four living creatures by the Throne 
to execute the will of Him who declared the 'scribes, Pharisees, 
and hypocrites' of His time to be 'serpents and offspring of 
vipers,' and assured them that 'all these things should come 
upon this generation' (Matt. 23:33, 36). The writings of 
Josephus abundantly show how fearfully all these things were 
fulfilled in the bloody war of Rome against Jerusalem."2 

Just as important as Zechariah in the background of this 
passage is the Prayer of Habakkuk(Hab. 3), the traditional syn- 
agogue reading for the second day of Pentecost, 3 in which the 
prophet relates a vision of God coming in judgment, shining like 
the sun, flashing with lightning (Hab. 3:3-4; cf. Rev. 1:16; 4:5), 
bringing pestilence and plague (Hab. 3:5; Rev. 6:8), shattering 
the mountains and collapsing the hills (Hab. 3:6, 10; Rev. 6:14), 
riding on horses against His enemies (Hab. 3:8, 15; Rev. 6:2, 



2. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics: A Study of the Most Notable 
Revelations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: 
Eaton and Mains, 1898), pp. 329f. 

3. M. D.Goulder, The Evangelists' Calendar: A Lectionary Explanation for 
the Development of Scripture (London: SPCK, 1978), p. 177. 

184 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:1-2 

4-5, 8), armed with a Bow (I-lab. 3:9, 11; Rev. 6:2), extinguishing 
sun and moon (Hab. 3:11; Rev. 6:12-13) and trampling the na- 
tions in His fury (Hab. 3:12; Rev. 6:15).Habakkuk clearly inter- 
prets his imagery as a prophecy of the military invasion of 
Judah by the Chaldeans, God's heathen instruments of divine 
wrath (Hab. 3:16; cf. 1:5-17). Under similar imagery, St. John 
portrays Israel's destruction at the hands of the invading Edom- 
ite and Roman armies. 

1-2 The Book- visions begin, as the Messages did, with 
Christ holding a cluster of seven in His hand. As the Lamb 
breaks each of the first four Seals, St. John hears-ene of the four 
living creatures saying as with a voice of thunder: Come! This is 
not spoken as a direction to St. John to "come and see."4 It is, 
rather, that each of the living creatures calls forth one of the 
Four Horsemen. The four corners of the earth, as it were, 
standing around the altar, are calling for God's righteous judg- 
ments to come and destroy the wicked — just as the apostolic 
Church's characteristic cry for judgment and salvation was Mar- 
anatha! O Lord, Come! — and bring Anathemas 

As the first living creature calls, St. John sees a white horse, 
its rider armed for battle, carrying a Bow. The Rider is already 
victorious, for a crown was given to Him (St. John generally 
uses the impersonal passive throughout the prophecy to indicate 
that something is done by God; cf. 6:2,4, 8, 11; 7:2,4; 8:2,3, 
etc.). Having achieved victor y, He rides on to further victories: 
He went out conquering, and to conquer. Amazingly, the run- 
of-the-mill Dispensational interpretation claims that this rider 
on the white horse is the Antichrist. Showing where his faith 



4. Contrary to the reading in the King James Version, which is not sup- 
ported by most manuscripts. 

5. 1 Cor. 16:22 (cf. Rev. 6:10); according to the DidacheiCh. 10), Maran- 
atha was repeated at the end of the Eucharistic liturgy. If John A. T. 
Robinson's hypothesis is correct (that the Didache was written in A.D. 40-60), 
this represents the closing prayer of every worship service for decades prior to 
the Fall of J erusalem. See his Redatine the New Testament (Philadelphia: The 
Westminster Press, 1976), pp. 324-27, 352. 

6. This is not true of all Dispensationalists. Among the dissenters on this 
point I am happy to note Henry Morris, The Revelation Record (Wheaton, 
IL: Tyndale House, 1983), p. 112, and Zane C. Hodges, "The First Horseman 
of the Apocalypse: Bibliotheca Sacra 119 (1962), pp. 324ff. 

185 



6:1-2 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

lies, Hal Lindsey goes all the way and declares that the Anti- 
christ is "the only person who could accomplish all of these 
feats."7 

But there are several points about this Rider that demonstrate 
conclusively that He can be none other than the Lord Jesus 
Christ. First, He is riding a white horse, as Jesus does in 
19:11-16. Second, He carries a Bow. As we have seen, the passage 
from Habakkuk that forms the basis for Revelation 6 shows the 
Lord as the Warrior-King carrying a Bow (Hab. 3:9, 11). St. 
John is also appealing hereto Psalm 45, one of the great prophe- 
cies of Christ's victory over His enemies, in which the psalmist joy- 
ously calls to Him as He rides forth conquering, arid to conquer: 

Gird Thy sword on Thy thigh, Mighty One, 

In Thy splendor and Thy majesty! 

And in Thy majesty ride on victoriously, 

For the cause of truth and meekness and righteousness; 

Let Thy right hand teach Thee awesome things. 

Thine arrows are sharp; 

The peoples fall under Thee; 

Thine arrows are in the heart of the King's enemies. 

(Ps. 45:3-5) 

We should ask a rather obvious question at this point - so 
obvious that we are apt to miss it altogether: Where did Christ 
get the Bow? The answer (as is usually the case) begins in 
Genesis. When God made the covenant with Noah, He declared 
that He was no longer at war with the earth, because of the 
"soothing aroma" of the sacrifice (Gen. 8:20-21); and as 
evidence of this He unstrung His Bow and hung it up "in the 
Cloud" for all to see (Gen. 9:13-17). Later, when Ezekiel was 
"raptured" up to the Throneroom at the top of the Glory- 
Cloud, he saw the Bow hanging above the Throne (Ezek. 
1:26-28); and it was still there when St. John ascended to heaven 
(Rev. 4:3). But when the Lamb stepped forward to receive the 
Book from His Father's hand, He also reached up and took 
down the Bow, to use it in judgment against the apostates of 



7, There's a New World Coming: A Prophetic Odyssey (Eugene, OR: Har- 
vest House Publishers, 1973), p. 103. 

186 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:1-2 

Israel. For those who "go on sinning willfully after receiving the 
knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for 
sins, but a certain terrifying expectation of judgment, and the 
fury of a fire that will consume the adversaries. Anyone who has 
set aside the Law of Moses dies without mercy on the testimony 
of two or three witnesses. How much severer punishment do 
you think he will deserve who has trampled under foot the Son 
of God, and has regarded as unclean the blood of the covenant 
by which he was sanctified, and has insulted the Spirit of Grace? 
For we know Him who said: 'Vengeance is Mine, I will repay.' 
And again: 'The Lord will judge His people.' It is a terrifying 
thing to fall into the hands of the living God" (Heb. 10:26-31). It 
was thus necessary that the first Rider should be seen carrying 
the Bow of God's vengeance, to signify the unleashing of the 
Curse upon Israel's ground; for these apostates, the Noachic 
covenant is undone. 

St. John's first readers would immediately have understood 
his reference to this Rider with the Bow as speaking of Jesus 
Christ, on the basis of what we have already seen. But, third, 
there is the fact that the Rider is given a crown, and this too 
agrees with what we know about Christ from Revelation (14:14; 
19:11 -13). 8 The fourth and final point, however, should render 
this interpretation completely secure: the Rider goes out con- 
quering. 9 This is the very same word in the Greek as was used in 
the letters to the seven churches for overcoming or conquering 
(see Rev. 2:7,11,17, 26; 3:5,12, 21). Consider how the Revelation 
has used this word up to this point: 

He who conquers, I will grant to him to sit down with Me on 
My Throne, as I also conquered and sat down with My Father 
on His Throne. (3:21) 

The Lion that is from the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, 
has conquered so as to open the Book. (5:5) 

And I looked, and behold, a white horse; and He who sat 
upon it had a Bow; and a crown was given to Him; and He went 
out conquering, and to conquer. (6:2) 



8. This word for crown (jstephanos) is used seven times in Revelation with 
reference to Christ and His people (2:10; 3:11; 4:4, 10; 6:2; 12:1; 14:14). 

9. Cf. St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, iv.xxi,3. 

187 



6:3-4 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

It is Christ who is the Conqueror par excellence. All events 
in history are at His command, and it is entirely appropriate 
that He should be the One represented here as the leader of the 
judgments of God. He is the Center of history, and it is He who 
brings judgments upon the Land. His opening of the New Cove- 
nant guaranteed the fall of Israel; as He conquered to open the 
Book, so He rode out in victory to implement the meaning of 
the Book in history. He rode forth at His Resurrection and 
Ascension as the already victorious King, conquering and to 
conquer, extending the applications of His once-for-all, defini- 
tive victory throughout the earth. And we should take special 
notice of the awful judgments following in His train. The 
Horsemen represent the forces God always uses in breaking dis- 
obedient nations, and now they are turned against His covenant 
people. The same holds true, of course, for all men and nations. 
All attempts to find peace and safety apart from Jesus Christ are 
doomed to failure. The nation that will not submit will be 
crushed by His armies, by the historical forces that are constantly 
at His absolute disposal. 

There are differences between this vision of Christ and that 
in Revelation 19. The primary reason for this is that in Chapter 
19, Christ is seen with a sword proceeding out of His mouth, 
and the vision symbolizes His conquest of the nations after a.d. 
70 with the Gospel. But that is not in view during the breaking 
of the seals. Here, Christ is coming against His enemies in judg- 
ment. He is coming, not to save, not to heal, but to destroy. The 
awful and terrifying riders who follow Him are not messengers 
of hope but of wrath. Israel is doomed. 

3-4 The Lamb breaks the Second Seal, and St. John hears 
the second living creature saying: Come! In answer to the call, a 
rider on a blood-red horse comes forth, who is granted by God 
the power to take peace from the Land, and that men should 
slay one another; and a great sword is given to him. This second 
rider, standing for war, shows how utterly depraved man is. God 
does not have to incite men to fight against each other; He sim- 
ply orders His angels to take away the conditions of peace. In a 
sinful world, why are there not more wars than there are? Why 
is there not more bloodshed? It is because there are restraints on 
man's wickedness, on man's freedom to work out the consistent 

188 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:5-6 

implications of his hatred and rebellion. But if God removes the 
restraints, man's ethical degeneracy is revealed in all its ugliness. 
John Calvin wrote: "The mind of man has been so completely 
estranged from God's righteousness that it conceives, desires, 
and undertakes, only that which is impious, perverted, foul, im- 
pure, and infamous. The heart is so steeped in the poison of sin, 
that it can breathe out nothing but a loathsome stench. But if 
some men occasionally make a show of good, their minds never- 
theless ever remain enveloped in hypocrisy and deceitful craft, 
and their hearts bound by inner depravity." '0 

All this was abundantly fulfilled in Israel and the surround- 
ing nations during the Last Days, when the Land was filled with 
murderers, revolutionaries, and terrorists of every description; 
when "every city was divided into two armies encamped against 
one another, and the preservation of the one party was in the de- 
struction of the other; so the day-time was spent in the shedding 
of blood, and the night in fear. ... It was then common to see 
cities filled with dead bodies, still lying unburied, and those of 
old men, mixed with infants, all dead, and scattered about to- 
gether; women also lay amongst them, without any covering for 
their nakedness; you might then see the whole province full of 
inexpressible calamities, while dread of still more barbarous 
practices which were threatened, was everywhere greater than 
what had been already perpetrated."] J 

5-6 Following on the heels of war is the third angelic rider, 
on a black horse, holding a pair of scales in his hand, a symbol 
of famine from the prophecy of Ezekiel, in which the starving 
inhabitants of Jerusalem were forced to weigh their food care- 
fully (Ezek. 4:10). This Horseman brings economic hardship, a 
situation described as completely chaotic. A voice from the cen- 
ter of the living creatures - i.e., from God's Throne - says: A 
quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a 
denarius; and do not harm the oil and the wine. This curse thus 



10. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ii.v.19, Ford Lewis 
Battles, trans. (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1960), p. 340. 

11. Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, ii.xviii.2; to gain an accurate (and 
thus horrifying) picture of how closely the prophecies in Revelation and the 

Synoptic Gospels parallel the events of Israel's Last Days, leading up to Titus's 
siege of Jerusalem, it is necessary to read Books ii-iv of Josephus' history. 

189 



6:5-6 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

means a shortage of the necessary staples — a measure of wheat 
rising to more than IOOW'0 of its former price, consuming an en- 
tire day's wages, u so that a man's entire labor is spent in obtain- 
ing food. This is God's curse on men whenever they rebel: The 
land itself spews them out (Lev. 18:24-28; Isa. 24). The Curse 
devours productivity in every area, and the ungodly culture 
perishes through starvation, disease, and oppression (Deut. 
28:15-34). This is how God controls the wicked: They must 
spend so much time just surviving that they are unable to exer- 
cise ungodly dominion over the earth. In the long run, this is the 
history of every culture that departs from God's Word. 13 

Josephus describes the frantic search for food during the 
final siege: "As the famine grew worse, the frenzy of the insur- 
gents kept pace with it, and every day both these horrors burned 
more fiercely. For, since nowhere was grain to be seen, men 
would break into houses, and if they found some they mis- 
treated the occupants for having denied their possession of it; if 
they found none, they tortured them as if they had concealed it 
more carefully. Proof whether they had food or not was pro- 
vided by the physical appearance of the wretches; those still in 
good condition were deemed to be well provided with food, 
while those who were already wasting away were passed over, 
for it seemed pointless to kill persons who would soon die of 
starvation. Many secretly bartered their possessions for a single 
measure of wheat if they happened to be rich, barley if they 
were poor. Then they shut themselves up in the darkest corners 
of their houses; in the extremity of hunger some even ate their 
grain underground, while others baked it, guided by necessity 
and fear. Nowhere was a table laid - the food was snatched half- 
cooked from the fire and torn into pieces." 14 

On the other hand, however, in this specific curse on Jeru- 
salem the luxuries of oil and wine are unaffected by the general 
price rise; the black Horseman is forbidden to touch them. The 
scales are the sign of Libra, spanning September and October; 



12. Robert H. Mounce, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1977), p. 155. 

13. See David Chilton, Productive Christians in an Age of Guilt- 
Manipulators: A Biblical Response to Ronald J. Sider (Tyler, TX: Institute for 
Christian Economics, third cd., 1985), pp. 92ff, 

14. Josephus, The Jewish War, v,x.2, 

190 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:7-8 

Farrer surmises that if the grain harvest failed in April and May, 
"men might begin to tighten their belts in October. They would 
then be just finishing the fruit-gathering, and might observe the 
irony of nature, that grapes and olives had gone unscathed; of 
the traditional triad corn, wine, and oil, corn, at a pinch, will 
keep you alive without the other two, but not they without the 
corn." 15 In all likelihood, another dimension of this expression's 
import is that God's messengers of destruction are kept from 
harming the righteous: Scripture often speaks of God's blessings 
upon the righteous in terms of oil and wine (cf. Ps. 104:15); and, 
of course, oil and wine are used in the rites of the Church (James 
5:14-15; 1 Cor. 11:25). This would then parallel those other passages 
in which the godly are protected from destruction (cf. 7:3). 

7-8 Finally, the Fourth Seal is broken, and the fourth living 
creature calls up the last Horseman of judgment, who rides a 
green horse - the green color 16 connoting a sickly pallor, a pre- 
sage of death. Thus the fourth rider, with a much broader and 
more comprehensive commission, is named Death; and he is fol- 
lowed by Hades (the grave) - both having been set loose by the 
Son of Man, who unlocked them with His key (1:18). And au- 
thority was given to him to bring four plagues upon the four- 
cornered Land: to kill with sword and with famine and with 
death and by the wild beasts of the Land. This is simply a sum- 
mary of all the covenantal curses in Leviticus 26 and Deuteron- 
omy 28. Moreover, it parallels God's listing of His four basic 
categories of curses with which He punishes ungodly and dis- 
obedient nations — "My four severe judgments against Jeru- 
salem: sword, famine, wild beasts, and plague to cut off man 
and beast from it!" (Ezek. 14:21; cf. Ezek. 5:17). At this prelim- 
inary stage, however - and in keeping with the "fourness" of the 
passage as a whole - Death and the grave are given authority to 
swallow up only a fourth of the Land. The Trumpet-judgments 



15. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), p. 100. J. Massyngberde Ford mentions an order by 
Titus during the siege of Jerusalem that olive groves and vineyards were not to 
be disturbed (Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and Commentary [Gar- 
den City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1975], p. 107). 

16. The Greek word is chloros, and simply means green; it is used two more 
times in Revelation (8:7; 9:4), and once in Mark (6:39). Translators have usually 
rendered it as pale, apparently under the firm conviction that, since there is no 
such thing as a green horse, St. John could not possibly have seen one. 

191 



6:7-8 PARTTHREE :THE SEVEN SEALS 

will take a third of the Land (cf. 8:7-12), and the Chalice- 
judgments will devastate it all. 

Perhaps the most significant obstacle to a correct interpreta- 
tion of this passage has been that commentators and preachers 
have been afraid and unable to see that it is God who is bringing 
forth these judgments upon the Land -that they are called forth 
from the Throne, and that the messengers of judgment are the 
very angels of God. Especially vicious and harmful is any inter- 
pretation which seems to pit the Son of God against the court of 
heaven, so that the curses recorded here are seen as somehow 
beneath His character. But it is Jesus, the Lamb, who breaks the 
seals of judgment, and it is Jesus, the King of kings, who rides 
out in conquest, leading the angelic armies against the nations, 
to destroy those who rebel against His universal rule. 

It was crucial for the early Christians to understand this, for 
these judgments were even then breaking loose upon their world. 
In every age, Christians must face the world with confidence, 
with the unshakable conviction that all events in history are pre- 
destined, originating from the Throne of God. When we see the 
world convulsed with wars, famines, plagues and natural disas- 
ters, we must say, with the Psalmist, "Come, behold the works 
of the Lord, who has wrought desolations in the earth" (Ps. 
46:8). Ultimately, the Christian's attitude toward God's judg- 
ments upon a wicked world is the same as that of the four living 
creatures around the Throne, who joyfully call out to God's 
messengers of judgment: "Come!" We too, in our prayers, are 
to plead with God to bring down His wrath on the ungodly, to 
manifest His righteousness in the earth. Faced with these awe- 
some revelations of judgment, what is our proper response? We 
are told, in 22:17: The Spirit and the Bride say, "Come/" 

The Martyrs Avenged (6:9-17) 

9 And when He broke the Fifth Seal, I saw underneath the altar 
the souls of those who had been slain because of the Word of 
God, and because of the Testimony which they had maintained; 

10 and they cried out with a loud voice, saying: How long, 
Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and avenge our 
blood on those who dwell on the Land? 

11 And there was given to each of them a white robe; and they 
were told that they should rest for a little while longer, until 

192 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:9-10 

the number of their fellow servants and their brethren who 
were to be killed even as they had been, should be completed 
also. 

12 And I looked when He broke the Sixth Seal, and there was a 
great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth 
made of hair, and the whole moon became like blood; 

13 and the stars of the heaven fell to the earth, as a fig tree casts 
its unripe figs when shaken by a great wind. 

14 And the heaven vanished like a scroll when it is rolled up; 
and every mountain and island were moved out of their 
places. 

15 And the kings of the earth and the great men and the com- 
manders and the rich and the strong and every slave and free 
man, hid themselves in the caves and among the rocks of the 
mountains; 

16 and they said to the mountains and to the rocks: Fall onus 
and hide us from the presence of Him who sits on the 
Throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; 

17 for the great Day of His wrath has come; and who is able to 
stand? 

9-10 For the first-century readers of this book, the tribula- 
tions depicted in it were becoming all too real: Each church 
would soon know the anguish of having some of its most forth- 
right and able leaders imprisoned and executed because of the 
Word of God, and because of the Testimony which they had 
maintained. For many Christians, all across the empire, the 
coming months and years would involve great distress, as fami- 
lies would be separated and loved ones killed. When tragedy 
strikes, we are tempted to ask: Does God care? This question is 
especially intense when the pain is caused by vicious enemies of 
the faith bent on destroying God's people, and the injustice of 
the suffering becomes apparent. If Christians were truly the ser- 
vants of the King, when would He act? When would He come to 
punish the apostates who had first used the power of the Roman 
State to crucify the Lord, and now were using that same power 
to kill and crucify the "prophets and wise men and scribes" 
(Matt. 23:34) whom Christ had sent? 

Thus the breaking of the Fifth Seal reveals a scene in heaven, 
where the souls of those who had been slain are underneath, or 
around the base of, the altar. The image is taken from the Old 

193 



6:9-10 PART THREE: THE SEVEN seals 

Testament sacrifices, in which the blood of the slain victim 
would stream down the sides of the altar and form into a pool 
around its base ("the soul [Heb. nephesh] of the flesh is in the 
blood," Lev. 17:11). 17 The blood of the martyrs has been poured 
out (cf. 2 Tim. 4:6), and as it fills the trench below the altar it 
cries out from the ground with a loud voice, saying, How long, 
O Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and avenge our 
blood upon those who dwell on the Land? The Church in 
heaven agrees with the cherubim in calling forth God's judg- 
ments: How long? is a standard phrase throughout Scripture for 
invoking divine justice for the oppressed (cf. Ps. 6:3; 13:1-2; 
35:17; 74:10; 79:5; 80:4; 89:46; 90:13; 94:3-4; Hab. 1:2; 2:6). The 
particular background for its use here, however, is again in the 
prophecy of Zechariah (1:12): After the Four Horsemen have 
patrolled through the earth, the angel asks, "O Lord of Hosts, 
how long wilt Thou have no compassion for Jerusalem?" St. 
John reverses this. After his Four Horsemen have been sent on 
their mission, he shows the martyrs asking how long God will 
continue to put up with Jerusalem. St. John's readers would not 
have failed to notice another subtle point: If the martyrs' blood 
is flowing around the base of the altar, it must be the priests of 
Jerusalem who have spilled it. The officers of the Covenant have 
slain the righteous. As Jesus and the apostles testified, Jerusalem 
was the murderer of the prophets (Matt. 23:34-37; Luke 13:33; 
Acts 7:51-52). The connection with "the blood of Abel" crying 
out from the ground near the altar (Gen. 4:10) is another indica- 
tion that this passage as a whole refers to judgment upon Jeru- 
salem (cf. Matt. 23:35-37). Like Cain, the "older brothers" of 
the Old Covenant envied and murdered their righteous 
"younger brothers" of the New Covenant (cf. 1 John 3:11-12). 
And so the blood of the righteous cries out: The saints pray that 
Christ's prophecy of "the days of vengeance" (Luke 21:22) will 
be fulfilled. 

That this blunt cry for vengeance strikes us as strange just 
shows how far our pietistic age has degenerated from the 
Biblical worldview. If our churches were more acquainted with 
the foundational hymnbook of the Church, the Psalms, instead 



17. See Rousas John Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel 
and Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1970] 1978), p. 145. 

194 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:11 

of the sugary, syrupy, sweetness-and-light choruses that charac- 
terize modern evangelical hymnals, we would understand this 
much easier. But we have fallen under a pagan delusion that it is 
somehow "unchristian" to pray for God's wrath to be poured out 
upon the enemies and persecutors of the Church. Yet that is what 
we see God's people doing, with God's approval, in both Testa- 
ments of the Holy Scriptures. 18 It is, in fact, a characteristic of 
the godly man that he despises the reprobate (Ps. 15:4). The spirit 
expressed in the imprecatory prayers of Scripture is a necessary 
aspect of the Christian's attitude (cf. 2 Tim. 4:14). Much of the 
impotence of the churches today is directly attributable to the 
fact that they have become emasculated and effeminate. Such 
churches, unable even to confront evil — much less "overcome" it 
— will eventually be captured and dominated by their enemies. 

11 The righteous and faithful saints in heaven are recognized 
as kings and priests of God, and thus there is given to each of 
them a white robe, symbolizing God's acknowledgment of their 
purity before Him, a symbol of the victory of the overcomes 
(cf. 3:4-5). The whiteness of the robe is part of a pattern already 
set up in Revelation (the Seven Letters) in which the last three 
items in a sevenfold structure match the first four items. Thus: 

First Seal: White horse Fifth Seal: White robes 

Second Seal: Red horse Sixth Seal: Moon like blood 

Third Seal: Black horse Sun black 

Fourth Seal: Green horse Seventh Seal: Green grass burned 

In answer to the saints' plea for vengeance, God answers that 
they should rest for a little while longer, until the number of 
their fellow servants and their brethren who were to be killed 
even as they had been, should be completed also. The full num- 
ber of martyrs has not yet been completed; the full iniquity of 
their persecutors has not yet been reached (cf. Gen. 15:16), al- 
though it is fast approaching the doom of God's "wrath to the 



18. See, e.g., Ps. 5,7,35, 58, 59,68,69,73,79, 83, 109, 137, 140. The common 
term for these and other passages is Imprecatory Psalms; such an expression can 
be misleading, however, since most of the Psalms have imprecatory sections 
(curses) in them (cf. Ps. 1:4-6; 3:7; 6:8-10; 34:16; 37:12-15; 54:7; 104:35; 
139:19-22), and all the Psalms are implicitly imprecatory, in that the blessings of 
the righteous are mentioned with the corollary assumed: The wicked are cursed. 

195 



6:12-14 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

uttermost" being poured out upon them (1 Thess. 2:14-16). We 
must remember that the primary application of this has to do 
with apostate Israel — those who dwell on the Land - which (in 
cooperation with the Roman authorities) was murdering the 
saints. The martyrs are instructed to wait a little while, and 
God's judgment will assuredly strike, bringing the promised 
"Great Tribulation" upon covenant-breaking Israel. 

12-14 As the Sixth Seal is broken, we are more clearly 
brought into the closing events of the Last Days. The Lamb 
reveals the next great aspect of His covenanted judgments, in a 
symbol often used in Biblical prophecy: de-creation. Just as the 
salvation of God's people is spoken of in terms of creation (cf. 
2 Cor. 4:6; 5:17; Eph. 2:10; 4:24; Col. 3:10), 19 so God's judg- 
ments (and the revelation of His presence as Judge over a sinful 
world) are spoken of in terms of de-creation, the collapse of the 
universe — God ripping apart and dissolving the fabric of crea- 
tion, 20 Thus St. John uses the fundamental structures of creation 
in describing the fall of Israel: 

1. Earth 

2. Sun 

3. M oon 

4. Stars 

5. Firmament 

6. Land 

7. Man 

These seven judgments are detailed in terms of the familiar 
prophetic imagery of the Old Testament. First, destabilization: a 
giant earthquake (cf. Ex. 19:18; Ps. 18:7, 15; 60:2; Isa. 13:13-14; 
24:19-20; Nab. 1:5). Second, the eclipse and mourning of Israel: 
The sun became black as sackcloth made of hair (Ex. 10:21-23; 
Job 9:7; Isa. 5:30; 24:23; Ezek. 32:7; Joel 2:10,31; 3:15; Amos 
8:9; Mic. 3:6). Third, the continued image of an eclipse, with 
the idea of defilement added: The whole moon became like 
blood (Job 25:5; Isa. 13:10; 24:23; Ezek. 32:7; Joel 2:10, 3 1 ). The 
fourth judgment affects the stars, which are images of govern- 



19. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 22ff. 

20. See ibid., pp. 98ff.,133ff. 

196 



FN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:15-17 

merit (Gen. 1:16); they are also clocks (Gen. 1:14), and their fall 
shows that Israel's time has run out: The stars fell to the earth, 
as a fig tree casts its unripe figs when shaken by a great wind 
(j ob 9:7; Eccl. 12:2; Isa. 13:10;34:4; Ezek. 32:8; Dan. 8:10; J oel 
2:10; 3:15); the great wind, of course, was brought by the Four 
Horsemen, who in Zechariah's original imagery were the Four 
Winds (Zech.6:5), and who will be reintroduced to St. John in 
that form in 7:1; and the fig tree is Israel herself (Matt. 21:19; 
24:32-34; Luke 21:29-32). Fifth, Israel now simply disappears: 
The heaven vanished like a scroll when it is rolled up 21 (Isa. 
34:4; 51:6; Ps. 102:25-26; on the symbolism of Israel as 
"heaven," see Isa. 51:15-16; Jer. 4:23-31; cf. Heb 12:26-27). Sixth, 
the Gentile powers are shaken as well: Every mountain and 
island were moved out of their places (Job 9:5-6; 14:18-19; 
28:9-11; Isa. 41:5, 15-16; Ezek. 38:20; Nab. 1:4-8; Zeph.2:ll). 22 
God's "old creation," Israel, is thus to be de-created, as the 
Kingdom is transferred to the Church, the New Creation (cf. 2 
Pet. 3:7-14). Because the rulers in God's Vineyard have killed 
His Son, they too will be killed (Matt. 21:33-45). The Vineyard 
itself will be broken down, destroyed, and laid waste (Isa. 
5:1-7). In God's righteous destruction of Israel, He will shake 
even heaven and earth (Matt. 24:29-30; Heb. 12:26-28) in order 
to deliver His Kingdom over to His new nation, the Church. 

15-17 Old Testament prophetic imagery is still in view as St. 
John here describes the apostates under judgment. This is the 
seventh phase of de-creation: the destruction of men. But this 



21. Referring to the Biblical imagery (cf. Gen. 1:7) of a "solid" sky, Ford ex- 
plains: "Heaven's having been 'wrenched apart like a scroll that is rolled up' 
leads to an image not of a papyrus or leather roll but rather a scroll like the 
two copper ones found in Qumran. The idea of noise is conveyed more dra- 
matically if the reader is meant to picture a metal scroll suddenly snapping 
shut." J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and 
Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and CO., 1975), p. 100. 

22. In contrast to popular interpretations of the texts which speak of faith 
moving mountains (Matt. 17:20; 21:21; Mark 11:23), it should be noted that 
this expression occurs in passages which speak of the coming judgment upon, 
and fall of, apostate Jerusalem. Jerusalem is often called "the mountain" in 
Scripture (e.g. Dan. 9:16); thus the saints at the altar (6:9-11) are pictured as 
crying out, in faith, for this great mountain to fall down. Jerusalem's destruc- 
tion is accordingly portrayed, in part, as a burning mountain being cast into 
the sea (8:8; cf. Zech. 14:4). 

197 



6:15-17 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

seventh item in the list opens up to reveal another "seven" within 
it (just as the Seventh Seal and Seventh Trumpet each contains the 
next set of seven judgments), for seven classes of men are named 
here, showing that the destruction is total, affecting small and 
great alike: the kings of the earth and the great men and the 
commanders and the rich and the strong and every slave and 
free man. None will be able to escape, regardless of either privi- 
leged status or insignificance. The whole Land has rejected 
Christ, and the whole Land is being excommunicated. Again, 
the parallels show that the judgment upon Israel is intended by 
this prophecy (cf. Isa. 2 and 24-27), although other nations 
("the kings of the earth") will be affected as well. 

As the earth is de-created, and the mediating natural revela- 
tion is removed - placing sinners face-to-face with the bare reve- 
lation of the holy and righteous God - the men of Israel attempt 
to flee and to seek protection in anything that might seem to 
offer refuge. Flight underground and into caves is a sign of be- 
ing under a curse (cf. Gen. 19:30-38). Thus they hid themselves 
(cf. Gen. 3: 8) in the caves and among the rocks of the moun- 
tains (the lextalionis for their mistreatment of the righteous: 
Heb. 11:38; cf. J ud. 7:25), 23 and they said to the mountains and 
to the rocks: Fall on us and hide us from the presence of Him 
who sits on the Throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; for 
the great day of His wrath has come; 24 and (Nab. 1:6; Mai. 3:2) 
who is able to stand? The interpretation given here is again con- 
firmed: This passage is not speaking of the End of the World, 
but of the End of Israel in a.d. 70. The origin of the symbolism 
used here is in the prophecy of Hosea against Israel: 

Ephraim will be seized with shame, 

And Israel will be ashamed of its own counsel. 

Samaria will be cut off with her king, 

Like a stick on the surface of the water. 



23. See James B. Jordan, Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, 
TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985), pp. 114, 140. 

24. G. B. Caird attains the breathtaking ne plus ultra of absurd commen- 
tary with his astounding assertion that "the wrath of God in the Revelation, as 
elsewhere in the Old and New Testaments, represents not the personal attitude 
of God towards sinners, but an impersonal process of retribution working it- 
self out in the course of history." A Commentary on the Revelation of St. John 
the Divine (New York: Harper and Row, 1966), p. 91. 

198 



IN THE PATH OF THE WHITE HORSE 6:15-17 

Also, the high places of Aven, the sin of Israel, will be destroyed; 
Thorn and thistle will grow on their altars. 
Then they will say to the mountains: Cover us! 
And to the hills: Fall on us! (Hos. 10:6-8) 

Jesus cited this text on His way to the crucifixion, stating 
that it would be fulfilled upon idolatrous Israel within the life- 
times of those who were then present: 

And there were following Him a great multitude of the peo- 
ple, and of women who were mourning and lamenting Him. But 
Jesus turning to them said, Daughters of Jerusalem, stop weep- 
ing for Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. For 
behold, the days are coming when they will say: Blessed are the 
barren, and the wombs that never bore, and the breasts that 
never nursed. Then they will begin to say to the mountains: Fall 
on us! and to the hills: Cover us! (Luke 23:27-30) 

As the churches in Asia Minor were first reading this vision, 
the prophesied judgments were already taking place; the final 
End was fast approaching. The generation that had rejected the 
Landlord's Son (cf. Matt. 21:33-45) would soon be screaming 
these very words. The crucified and resurrected Lord was com- 
ing to destroy the apostates. This was to be the great Day of the 
outpoured wrath of the Lamb, whom they had slain. 



199 



7 
THE TRUE ISRAEL 

The two visions of this chapter (v. 1-8 and v. 9-17) are still 
part of the Sixth Seal, providing a resolution of the problem of 
Israel's fall. Yet they also form an interlude or intermission, a 
period of delay between the sixth and seventh seals that serves to 
heighten the sense of waiting complained of by the saints in 
6:10, since this section is in part the divine answer to their prayer 
(cf. the delay between the sixth and seventh trumpets, 10:1-11:14). 
Before the Fall of Jerusalem, Christianity was still largely identi- 
fied with Israel, and the futures of the two were interconnected. 
The Christians were not separatists; they regarded themselves as 
the true heirs of Abraham and Moses, their religion as the ful- 
fillment of all the promises to the fathers. For the Church to ex- 
ist completely separate from the Israelite nationality and from 
the Holy Land was virtually unimaginable. Thus, if God's wrath 
were to be unleashed upon Israel with all the undiluted fury por- 
trayed in the Sixth Seal, bringing the recreation of heaven and 
earth and the annihilation of mankind, what would become of 
the Church? What about the faithful who find themselves in the 
midst of a collapsing civilization? Would the believing remnant 
be destroyed in the coming conflagration along with the enemies 
of the faith? 

The answer given in these visions is that "God has not des- 
tined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord 
Jesus Christ" (1 Thess. 5:9): The Church will be preserved. In 
terms of the coming judgment on Israel, in fact, the Lord had 
given explicit instructions about how to escape from the Tribu- 
lation (see Matt. 24:15-25; Mark 13:14-23; Luke 21:20-24). The 
Christians living in Jerusalem obeyed the prophetic warning, 

201 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

and were preserved, as Marcellus Kik pointed out in his study of 
Matthew 24: "One of the most remarkable things about the 
siege of Jerusalem was the miraculous escape of the Christians. 
It has been estimated that over a million Jews lost their lives in 
that terrible siege, but not one of them was a Christian. This our 
Lord indicated in verse 13: 'But he that shall endure to the end, 
the same shall be saved.' That the 'end' spoken of was not the 
termination of a Christian's life but rather the end of Jerusalem 
is evident from the context. Immediately after this verse Christ 
goes on to relate the exact time of the end. Christians who 
would live to the end would be saved from the terrible tribula- 
tion. Christ indicates also the time for the Christian to flee from 
the city so that he could be saved during its destruction. This is 
verified in a parallel passage (Luke 21:18): 'But there shall not an 
hair of your head perish.' In other words, during the desolation 
of Jerusalem, Christians would be unharmed, although in the 
period previous to this some would lose their lives through per- 
secution." 1 

The 144,000 Sealed (7:1-8) 

1 And after this I saw four angels standing at the four corners 
of the Land, holding back the Four Winds of the earth, so 
that no wind should blow on the Land or on the sea or on 
any tree. 

2 And I saw another angel ascending from the rising of the 
sun, having the Seal of the living God; and he cried out with 
a loud Voice to the four angels to whom it was granted to 
harm the Land and the sea, 

3 saying: Do not harm the Land or the sea or the trees, until 
we have sealed the bond-servants of our God on their fore- 
heads. 

4 And I heard the number of those who were sealed, one hun- 
dred and forty-four thousand sealed from every tribe of the 
sons of Israel: 

5 From the tribe of J udah, twelve thousand were sealed, from 
the tribe of Reuben twelve thousand, from the tribe of Gad 
twelve thousand, 



1 . J. Marcellus Kik, An Eschatology of Victory (Nutley, NJ: The Presbyter- 
ian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1971), pp. 96f. 

202 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:1-3 

6 from the tribe of Asher twelve thousand, from the tribe of 
Naphtali twelve thousand, from the tribe of Manasseh 
twelve thousand, 

7 from the tribe of Simeon twelve thousand, from the tribe of 
Levi twelve thousand, from the tribe of Issachar twelve 
thousand, 

8 from the tribe of Zebulun twelve thousand, from the tribe of 
J oseph twelve thousand, from the tribe of Benjamin, twelve 
thousand were sealed. 

1-3 St. John sees four angels standing at the four corners of 
the Land, divine messengers to whom it was granted to harm the 
Land and the sea; yet here they are holding back the Four 
Winds of the earth, so that no wind should blow on the Land or 
on the sea or on any tree. While Land and sea are in the genitive 
case, tree is in the accusative, indicating that St. John wishes to 
draw special attention to it. Throughout the Bible, trees are im- 
ages of men (Jud. 9:8-15). In particular, they are symbols for the 
righteous (Ex. 15:17; Ps. 1:3; 92:12-14; Isa. 61:3; Jer. 17:5 -8).2 

The wind in Scripture is used in connection with the coming 
of God and the action of His angels in either blessing or curse 
(cf. Gen. 8:1; 41:27; Ex. 10:13, 19; 14:21; 15:10; Num. 11:31; Ps. 
18:10; 104:3-4; 107:25; 135:7; 147:18; 148:8; John 3:8; Acts 2:2). In 
this case, the angel is speaking of the sirocco, the hot desert 
blast that scorches vegetation as a figure of God's burning judg- 
ment of the ungodly (cf. 16:9, and contrast 7:16): 

Though he flourishes among the reeds, 

An east wind shall come, 

The wind of the Lord coming up from the wilderness; 

And his fountain will become dry, 

And his spring will be dried up; 

It will plunder his treasury of every precious article. 

Samaria will be held guilty, 

For she has rebelled against her God. 

They will fall by the sword, 

Their little ones will be dashed in pieces, 



2. See James B.Jordan's forthcoming studies, Food and Faith and Trees 
and Thorns. 

203 



7:1-3 part THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

And their pregnant women will be ripped open. 
(Hos. 13:15-16) 

As we have seen, 3 the association of angels with "nature" is 
not "mere" imagery. God through His angels really does control 
weather patterns, and He uses weather as an agency of blessing 
and judgment. From the very first verse, the Bible is written in 
terms of what Gary North calls cosmic personalism: "God did 
not create a self-sustaining universe which is now left to operate 
in terms of autonomous laws of nature. The universe is not a giant 
mechanism, like a clock, which God wound up at the beginning 
of time. Ours is not' a mechanistic world, nor is it an autono- 
mous biological entity, growing according to some genetic code 
of the cosmos. Ours is a world which is actively sustained by 
God on a full-time basis (Job 38-41). All creation is inescapably 
persona/ and theocentric. 'For the invisible things of him from 
the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the 
things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead . . .' 

(Rem. 1:20). 

"If the universe is inescapably personal, then there can be no 
phenomenon or event in the creation which is independent from 
God. No phenomenon can be said to exist apart from God's all- 
inclusive plan for the ages. There is no uninterpreted 'brute fac- 
tuality.' Nothing in the universe is autonomous. . . . Nothing in 
the creation generates its own conditions of existence, including 
the law structure under which something operates or is operated 
upon. Every fact in the universe, from beginning to end, is ex- 
haustively interpreted by God in terms of His being, plan, and 
power."4 

The four angels are restraining the judgment in obedience to 
the command of another angel, whom St. John sees ascending 
from the rising of the sun, whence God's actions in history tradi- 
tionally came (cf. Isa. 41:1-4, 25; 46:11; Ezek. 43:1-3). This angel 
comes as the representative of Christ, the Sunrise from on high 



3. See comments on 4:5-8, above. 

4. The Dominion Covenant: Genesis (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian 
Economics, 1982), pp. 1-2; cf. pp. 2-11, 425-54; see also Rousas John Rush- 
doony, The Mythology of Science (Nutley, NJ: The Craig Press, 1967). 

204 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:1-3 

who has visited us (Luke 1:78), the Sun of righteousness who 
has risen with healing in His wings (Mai. 4:2; cf. Eph. 5:14; 
2 Pet. 1:19). He possesses the Spirit without measure (John 
3:34), the Seal of the living God with which He marks out the 
people of His own possession, and by His order the judgments 
on the Land are not fully poured out until we - Christ and His 
messengers — have sealed the servants of our God on their fore- 
heads: The Seal of the Spirit (Eph. 1:13; 4:30) is applied to the 
righteous before the Seals of wrath are applied to the wicked; 
Pentecost precedes Holocaust. 

The seal in the Biblical world signified a grant of authority 
and power, a guarantee of protection, and a mark of ownership 
(cf. 2 Cor. 1:21-22; 2 Tim. 2:19). The primary Old Testament 
background for St. John's imagery is Ezekiel 9:1-7, which shows 
God commissioning executioners to destroy everyone in the city 
of J erusalem; the first to be slain are the elders at the Temple. 
First, however, He commands another angel to "go through the 
midst of the city, even through the midst of J erusalem, and put a 
mark on the foreheads of the men who sigh and groan over all 
the abominations that are being committed in its midst" (v. 4). 
The godly are marked for protection, in order that the apostates 
in J erusalem may be destroyed. 

The mark on the forehead is thus a symbol of man restored 
to fellowship with God. One striking example of this was the 
High Priest, whose forehead was marked with gold letters pro- 
claiming that he was HOLY TO THE LORD (Ex. 28:36). Fur- 
ther, in Deuteronomy 6:6-8, all God's people are sealed in the 
forehead and the hand with the law of God, just as they are 
characterized in life by faithful obedience in thought and action 
to every word of God. 

The protective "mark" in Ezekiel 9 is literally tav, the last let- 
ter of the Hebrew alphabet. The ancient Hebrew form of the tav 
was +, a cross - a fact that was not lost on the early Church, 
which saw it as "a quasi-prophetic reference to the sign of the 
cross as used by Christians, and it is possible that the use of that 
sign in baptism may have originated in this passage."5 Tertullian 



5. E . H . Plumptre, The Pulpit Commentary: Ezekiel (London: Funk and 
Wagnalls Co., n.d.), Vol. 1, pp. 162f. 

205 



7:4-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

believed that God had given Ezekiel "the very form of the cross, 
which He predicted would be the sign on our foreheads in the 
true Catholic Jerusalem." 6 Holy Baptism, the Seal of the Spirit 
(2 Cor. 1:21-22; Gal. 3:27; Eph. 1:13-14; 4:30; cf. Rem. 4:11), 
marks these believers as the covenant-keeping bond-servants of 
our God, who will be preserved from God's wrath as the un- 
godly are destroyed. "The purpose of the sealing was to preserve 
the true Israel of God as a holy seed. It was not designed to save 
them from tribulation, but to preserve them in the midst of the 
great tribulation about to come and to glorify them thereby. 
Though the old Israel be cast off, a new and holy Israel is to be 
chosen and sealed with the Spirit of the living God." 7 

4-8 The number of those who were sealed is read to St. 
John: one hundred and forty-four thousand sealed from every 
tribe of the sons of Israel, with twelve thousand from each of 
the twelve tribes. The number 144,000 is obviously symbolic: 
twelve (the number of Israel) squared, then multiplied by 1000 
(ten and its multiples symbolizing many; cf. Deut. 1:11; 7:9; Ps. 
50:10; 68:17; 84:10; 90:4). St. John pictures for us the ideal 
Israel, Israel as it was meant to be, in all its perfection, sym- 
metry, and completeness; the holy Army of God, mustered for 
battle according to her thousands (cf. 1 Chron. 4-7). The "thou- 
sand" was the basic military division in the camp of Israel 
(Num. 10:2-4, 35-36; 31:1-5,48-54; 2 Sam. 18:1; 1 Chron. 12:20; 
13:1; 15:25; 26:26; 27:1; 28:1; 29:6; 2 Chron. 1:2; 17:14-19; Ps. 
68:17). This is the significance of Micah's famous prophecy of 
the Nativity: Even though Bethlehem is too small to be counted 
"among the thousands of Judah," too insignificant to be consid- 
ered seriously in the nation's military strategy, yet "from you 
One will go forth for Me to be Ruler in Israel," the King who 



6. Tertullian,^4ga/ns/Ma/icz'o/7,iii.22, in Alexander Roberts and James Don- 
aldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans 
Publishing Co., 1973), Vol. Ill, pp. 340f, On the legitimacy of the sign of the 
cross as a symbolic action, see James B. Jordan, The Sociology of the Church: 
Essays in Reconstruction (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1986), pp. 207ff, 

7. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics: A Study of the Most Notable Reve- 
lations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton 
and Mains, 1898), p. 336. 

206 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:4-8 

will establish God's justice and peace to the ends of the earth 
(Mic. 5:1-15). It is in terms of this Biblical imagery that St. John 
hears the names of the tribes shouted out: He is listening to the 
military roll-call of the Lord's Hosts. In this case, each of the 
twelve tribes is able to field twelve full divisions, a numerically 
perfect army of 144,000 soldiers of the Lord. 

St. John's vision of an Israelite army is thus, in Milton 
Terry's words, "an apocalyptic picture of that 'holy seed' of 
which Isaiah speaks in Isaiah 6:13 — that surviving remnant 
which was destined to remain like the stump of a fallen oak after 
cities had been laid waste and the whole land had become a des- 
olation - that 'remnant of Jacob,' which was to be preserved 
from the 'consumption determined in the midst of all the land' 
(Isa. 10:21-23). It is the same 'remnant according to the election 
of grace' of which Paul speaks in Romans 9:27-28; 11:5. God 
will not destroy Jerusalem and make the once holy places deso- 
late until He first chooses and seals a select number as the begin- 
ning of a new Israel. The first Christian Church was formed out 
of chosen servants of God from 'the twelve tribes of the disper- 
sion' (James 1:1), and the end of the Jewish age was not to come 
until by the ministry of Jewish Christian apostles and prophets 
the gospel of the kingdom had been preached in the whole world 
for a testimony unto all the nations (Matt.24:14)." 8 

St. John comforts his readers: Judgment will assuredly be 
poured out upon the apostates of the Old Covenant, but the 
Church herself is not in danger. Indeed, the true Covenant peo- 
ple are safe, whole, and entire. Even though God is about to 
destroy Jerusalem, annihilating every last vestige of the Old 
Covenant world-order and system of worship, Israel endures. 
The Covenant promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are not 
jeopardized in the slightest. In fact, the outpouring of God's 
wrath in the destruction of Jerusalem will only serve to reveal 
the true Israel in greater glory than ever before. Jerusalem is 
sacked and burned, its inhabitants killed and scattered; but Israel 
- all of her people, in all of her tribes - is sealed and saved. 
"Judgment thus is not only the other side of the coin to salva- 
tion, but it is also an act of grace and mercy to the people of 



8. Ibid., pp. 341f. 

207 



7:4-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

God. However devastating the fall of Jerusalem was to the 
faithful remnant, without that fall no remnant would have re- 
mained." 9 



The Order of the Twelve Tribes in Revelation 

[1 have set this out as a separate section because it will 
undoubtedly be the most wearying part of the book to 
read. The reader who tires easily should give it a brief 
glance and move on. While I have tried to simplify the dis- 
cussion as much as possible, I fear it still looks exceedingly 
complex. All this would be much easier if we knew our 
Bibles as well as the children in the first-century syna- 
gogues: If we knew by heart the names of Jacob's sons and 
their mothers, and the twenty or so different orders in 
which they are listed in the Old Testament (and the reasons 
for each variation), we would almost immediately under- 
stand what St. John has done with his list, and why. 

Some remarks by Austin Farrer are especially pertinent 
here: "The purpose of symbols is that they should be im- 
mediately understood, the purpose of expounding them is 
to restore and build up such an understanding. This is a 
task of some delicacy. The author had not with his con- 
scious mind thought out every sense, every interconnection 
of his imagery. They had worked in his thinking, they had 
not themselves been thought. If we endeavor to expose 
them, we shall appear to over-intellectualize the process of 
his mind, to represent an imaginative birth as a speculative 
construction. Such a representation not merely misrepre- 
sents, it also destroys belief, for no one can believe in the 
process when it is thus represented. No mind, we realize, 
could think with such complexity, without destroying the 
life of the product of thought. Yet, if we do not thus intel- 
lectualize, we cannot expound at all; it is a necessary dis- 
tortion of method, and must be patiently endured by the 
reader. Let it be said once for all that the convention of in- 
tellectualization is not to be taken literally. We make no 



9.RousasJ ohn Rushdoony, Salvation and Godly Rule (Vallecito, CA: Ross 

House Books, 1983), p. 141. 

208 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:4-8 

pretence of distinguishing between what was discursively 
thought and what intuitively conceived in a mind which 
penetrated its images with intelligence and rooted its intel- 
lective acts in imagination. . . . 

"The reader who perseveres through the analyses which 
follow may naturally ask, 'How much of all this did the 
congregations of the Seven Churches comprehend, when 
the apocalyptic pastoral of their archbishop was read out 
to them?' The answer is, no doubt, that of the schematic 
analysis to which we resort they understood nothing, be- 
cause they were listening to the Apocalypse of St. John, 
and not to the lucubrations of the present writer. They 
were men of his own generation, they constantly heard the 
Old Testament in their assemblies, and were trained by the 
preacher (who might be St. John himself) to interpret it by 
certain conventions. And so, without intellectual analysis, 
they would receive the symbols simply for what they were. 
They would understand what they would understand, and 
that would be as much as they had time to digest."] 10 

Scholars have long puzzled over the order of the tribes in St. 
John's list. Obviously, Judah is named first because that is the 
tribe of Jesus Christ; other than that, many have supposed that 
the list is either haphazard (given the Biblical writers' - especi- 
ally St. John's - extreme attention to detail, this is highly un- 
likely), or else permanently locked in mystery (this is just sheer 
arrogance; we should always remember that, if we can't answer 
a question, someone probably will come along in the next hun- 
dred years or so who will). As usual, however, Austin Farrer's 
explanation has the most to offer. Pointing out that the names 
of the twelve tribes are written on the gates of the four-cornered 
New Jerusalem (21:12), he proposes that the order of the tribes 
corresponds to the order in which the gates are listed: east, 
north, south, west. As we can see in the first diagram (which, 
like the maps of the ancient world, is oriented toward the east), n 



10. Austin Farrer, A Rebirth of Images: The Making of St. John's Apoca- 
lypse (Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, [1949] 1970), pp. 20f. 

11. Orient means east; thus, if you are truly "oriented ," you are "easted" 
already, placed so that you are facing the right direction (which is usually, but 
not always, east). 

209 



7:4-8 



PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 



St. John begins at the eastern corner withJildah (because the 
sealing angel comes from the east, v. 2), goes through Reuben 
and Gad to Asher at the north corner, then down the northwest 
side with Naphtali and Manasseh; starting over again (we'll see 
why in a moment), he lists Simeon and Levi on the southeast 
side to Issachar at the south, then turns round the corner and 
goes through Zebulun and Joseph, ending with Benjamin at the 
western corner. 



/ 



! i 



Q 

a 
\ 




\ 



o 

► 

X 



210 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 



7:4-8 



Why did St. John arrange the list of tribes in this manner? 
The most likely answer (Farrer's) is found in Genesis and 
Ezekiel. The twelve tribes descended from the twelve sons of 
J acob, whom he sired through his wives Leah and Rachel, and 
their respective handmaids, Zilpah and Bilhah (legally, the 
handmaids' children belonged to Leah and Rachel; see Gen. 
29:31-30:24 and 35:16-18). The list of J acob's sons is as follows: 



LEAH: Reuben 
Simeon 
Levi 
J udah 

RACHEL: Dan (from Bilhah) 

Naphtali (from Bilhah) 



Gad (from Zilpah) 
Asher (from Zilpah) 
Issachar 
Zebulun 

J oseph 
Benjamin 



When the prophet Ezekiel set forth his vision of the ideal 
Jerusalem, he too showed twelve gates, one for each tribe (Ezek. 
48:30-35). 

SENIOR LEAH 



I- 



s \, 



Levi J udah Reuben 



ZILPAH ( 

I 
\ 



Gad 



Asher 



w- 



J oseph 



Benjamin 



I RACHEL 



BILHAH ' Naphtali 



Zebulun Issachar Simeon 



Dan I BILHAH 

/ 



JUNIOR LEAH 

211 



7:4-8 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

At first glance, it does not seem to have much in common 
with St. J ohn's; yet once we view them together, they appear 
very close indeed. Ezekiel's list is arranged very symmetrically. 
Ezekiel has divided Leah's sons into two major groups of three 
("senior" and "junior"), balancing each other on north and 
south. Rachel's two sons on the east are set across from Zilpah's 
two sons on the west; and below each pair is one of Bilhah's 
sons. Ezekiel has also brought J udah (the royal tribe) into the 
top row of three by having him change places with Simeon. 

Fairer explains St. John's revision of Ezekiel: "He makes a 
genuine three for Rachel, by substituting Manasseh's name for 
Dan's. In fact, the tribe of Joseph had become two tribes, Eph- 
raim and Manasseh. Since Ephraim was Joseph's principal heir, 
Joseph covers Ephraim; Manasseh is added. A by-product of 
this improvement is the disappearance from the list of Dan, one 
of the Twelve. Perhaps it will not have displeased St. John; let 
Dan be the Judas of the patriarchs. Dan had, in fact, a dubious 
reputation (Gen. 49:17; Lev. 24:10-11; 1 Kings 12:28-30; Jer. 4:15 
and 8:16). In the end (Rev. 21:12-14), St. John puts the names of 
the apostles round the city, pairing them with the tribes. We can- 
not suppose that Iscariot's name would stand there, any more 
than Dan's. 

"Then, as to the artificial promotion of Judah: instead of ex- 
changing Judah and Simeon, St. John simply puts Judah up two 
places. The result is that Levi, not Simeon, is pushed out of the 
first three. The alteration is presumably deliberate, for in the 
new dispensation Levi is degraded. The priesthood is united 
with the kingship in the tribe of Judah, as the writer to the 
Hebrews so copiously explains; Levi has no special standing (see 
especially Heb. 7:11 -14)." 12 

The Great Multitude (7:9-17) 
9 After these things I looked, and behold, a great multitude, 

that no one could count, from every nation and all tribes 
and peoples and tongues, standing before the Throne and 
before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, and palm branches 



12. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine, p. 108, 

212 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:9 

were in their hands; 

10 and they cry out with a loud voice, saying: 

Salvation to our God who sits on the Throne, and to 
the Lamb! 

11 And all the angels were standing around the Throne and 
around the elders and the four living creatures; and they fell 
on their faces before the Throne and worshiped God, 

12 saying: 

Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiv- 
ing and honor and power and might, be to our God 
forever and ever! Amen! 

13 And one of the elders answered, saying to me, These who 
are clothed in the white robes, who are they, and from where 
have they come? 

14 And I said to him, My lord, you know. And he said to me, 
These are the ones who come out of the Great Tribulation, 
and they have washed their robes and made them white in 
the blood of the Lamb. 

15 For this reason, they are before the Throne of God; and they 
serve Him day and night in His Temple; and He who sits on 
the Throne shall spread His Tabernacle over them. 

16 They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; neither 
shall the sun beat down on them, nor any heat; 

17 for the Lamb in the center of the Throne shall be their Shep- 
herd, and shall guide them to the springs of the Water of 
Life; and God shall wipe every tear from their eyes. 

9 We have already noticed a literary device that St. John 
uses to display his images from various angles: hearing, then 
seeing. For example, in 1:10-13, St. J ohn hears a Voice, then 
turns to see the Lord; in 5:5-6, he hears of the Lion of Judah, 
then sees the Lamb; in 6:1-8, he hears a living creature say 
"Come!"- and then sees the object of the creature's command. 
The same pattern occurs here in this chapter: St. John tells us, I 
heard the number of those who were sealed (v. 4); then, after 
these things - after hearing the number of the redeemed - I 
looked, and behold, a great multitude (v. 9). This pattern, and 
the fact that the blessings ascribed to both groups are blessings 
that belong to the Church, indicate that these two groups are, to 
some extent, two different aspects of the one, universal Church. 

213 



7:9 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

So, from one standpoint, God's people are definitely numbered; 
none of the elect are missing, and the Church is perfectly sym- 
metrical and whole. From another standpoint, the Church is in- 
numerable, a great host that no one could count. Seen from one 
perspective, the Church is the new, the true, Israel of God: the 
sons of Jacob gathered into all their tribes, full and complete. 
From another, equally true perspective, the Church is the whole 
world: a great multitude redeemed from every nation and all 
tribes and peoples and tongues. 

In other words, the 144,000 are the Remnant of Israel; yet 
the fulfillment of the promises to Israel takes place through the 
salvation of the world, by bringing the Gentiles in to share the 
blessings of Abraham (Gal. 3:8). The number of the Remnant is 
filled by the multitudes of the saved from all nations, just as the 
New Jerusalem - whose dimensions are measured in twelves and 
whose gates are inscribed with the names of the twelve tribes — is 
filled with the glory and honor of the nations of the world 
(21:12-27). Farrer says: "By the contrast between the numbered 
tribes and the innumerable host, St. John gives expression to 
two antithetical themes, both equally traditional. God knows 
the number of His elect; those who inherit the blessing of Abra- 
ham are as numberless as the stars (Gen. 15:5). Yet St. John can- 
not mean either that the number of Gentile saints is unknown to 
God, or that the number of righteous Israelites can be counted 
by men. What he tells us is, that his ear receives a number result- 
ing from an angelic census; and that his eye is presented with a 
multitude he cannot count, as was Abraham's when called upon 
to look at the stars. The vision of the white-robed host, purified 
by martyrdom, must in any case reflect Daniel 11:35. The theme 
is continued in Daniel 12:1-3, where the same persons are 
described as 'registered in the book' and as 'like the stars'; it is 
easy to conclude 'numbered, therefore, yet uncountable.' " 13 

In St. John's vision, therefore, the sealed Remnant of Israel 
is the holy seed, the "first fruits" (14:4) of the new Church, des- 
tined to expand into an innumerable multitude gathered in wor- 
ship before the Throne in heaven. The nucleus of Israel becomes 
the Church, redeemed from every nation in fulfillment of the 



13. Ibid., p. 110. 

214 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:9 

Abrahamic promise (Gen. 15:5; 22:17-18); and thus the Church 
becomes the whole world. The salvation of Israel alone had 
never been God's intention; He sent his Son "that the world 
should be saved through Him" (John 3:16-17). As the Father 
said to the Son, in planning the Covenant of Redemption: 

It is too small a thing that You should be My Servant 

To raise up the tribes of J acob, 

And to restore the preserved ones of Israel; 

I will also make of You a Light to the nations 

So that My salvation may reach to the end of the earth. 

(Isa. 49:6) 

The actual number of the saved, far from being limited to 
mere tens of thousands, is in reality a multitude that no one 
could count, so vast that it cannot be comprehended. For the 
fact is that Christ came to save the world. Traditionally - 
although Calvinists have been technically correct in declaring 
that the full benefits of the atonement were intended only for 
the elect - both Calvinists and Arminians have tended to miss 
the point of John 3:16. That point has been beautifully summar- 
ized by Benjamin Warfield: "You must not fancy, then, that God 
sits helplessly by while the world, which He has created for 
Himself, hurtles hopelessly to destruction, and He is able only 
to snatch with difficulty here and there a brand from the univer- 
sal burning. The world does not govern Him in a single one of 
its acts: He governs it and leads it steadily onward to the end 
which, from the beginning, or ever a beam of it had been laid, 
He had determined for it. . . . Through all the years one in- 
creasing purpose runs, one increasing purpose: the kingdoms of 
the earth become ever more and more the Kingdom of our God 
and His Christ. The process may be slow; the progress may ap- 
pear to our impatient eyes to lag. But it is God who is building: 
and under His hands the structure rises as steadily as it does 
slowly, and in due time the capstone shall be set into its place, 
and to our astonished eyes shall be revealed nothing less than a 
saved world." 14 



14, Benjamin B. Warfield, from a sermon on John 3:16 entitled "God's Im- 
measurable Love," in Biblical and Theological Studies (Philadelphia: Presby- 
terian and Reformed Publishing CO., 1968), pp.518f. 

215 



7:9 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

Unfortunately, many have failed to appreciate fully the im- 
plications of this passage. For more than a century, Christianity 
has been plagued by an altogether unwarranted defeatism: We 
have believed in the depravity of man more than in the sover- 
eignt y of God. We have more faith in an unregenerate creature's 
power to resist God's Word, than in the power of the almighty 
Creator to turn a man's heart according to His will. Such an im- 
potent attitude has not always characterized God's people. 
Charles Spurgeon encouraged a gathering of missionaries with 
these words: "I myself believe that King Jesus will reign, and the 
idols be utterly abolished; but I expect the same power which 
turned the world upside down once will still continue to do it. 
The Holy Ghost would never suffer the imputation to rest upon 
His holy name that He was not able to convert the world." 15 

Because of the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, this is 
the age of the triumph of the Gospel. The plain indications of 
Scripture are that the tendency of the nations, over time, will be 
toward conversion. The saved will vastly outnumber the lost. 
Throughout the Book of Revelation, as in the rest of the Bible, 
we find Satan continually defeated before the great army of the 
elect. Even when Satan appears to be dominant, he knows that 
"he has only a short time" (12:12). The period of Satan's seeming 
triumph is counted in days and months (12:6; 13:5), and even 
then it is nothing more than a mad, futile scramble for fleeting 
power; in marked contrast, the period of the saints' dominion is 
measured in years - a thousand of them - and from first (1:6) to 
last (20:4-6) they are designated as kings. Jesus is Victor! He has 
come to save the world, to redeem the nations, and He will not 
be disappointed: "He will see His offspring, He will prolong His 
days, and the good pleasure of the Lord will prosper in His 
hand" (Isa. 53:10). 

St. John sees the redeemed world of victorious saints stand- 
ing before the Throne and before the Lamb in worship. They 
are clothed in white robes, symbolizing righteousness, with 
palm branches in their hands, as the well-known symbol of the 
restoration of God's people to Paradise. This is also reminiscent 
of the Feast of Tabernacles, initiated during the Exodus: It is no 



15. Quoted in Iain Murray, The Puritan Hope: Revival and the Interpreta- 
tion of Prophecy (London: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1971), p. 258. 

216 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:9 

accident that the word tabernacle occurs in this passage (see on 
v. 15 below). 16 R. J. Rushdoony shows how extensive the Ex- 
odus imagery is in the symbolism of Revelation: "Jesus is both 
the true Moses (the Song of Moses is cited in Rev. 15:2ff.), and 
the greater Joshua. He is the deliverer of God's people. Simeon 
at the temple declared that his eyes had seen God's salvation, 
having seen the infant saviour (Luke 2:30; cf. Isa. 52:10), for he 
was one of those 'who were looking for the redemption of Jeru- 
salem' (Luke 2:38), i.e., its deliverance from captivity, from 
spiritual Egypt. Pharaoah's killing of the infants is paralleled by 
Herod's murderous order (Ex. 1:16; 2:15; 4:19; Matt. 2:16). The 
infant Christ is called the true Israel called out of Egypt (Matt. 
2:14f.;cf. Ex. 4:22; Hos. 11:1). Israel's 40 years of temptation in 
the wilderness, and its failure, is matched by Christ's 40 days of 
temptation in the wilderness, ending in victory; Jesus resisted by 
quoting Moses. Jesus sent out 12 disciples, to be the new Israel 
of God, the new heads of a new nation or people. Jesus also sent 
out 70 (Luke 10:lff.), even as Moses gathered 70, to whom God 
gave the Spirit (Num. 11 :16ff.). We are given parallels to the con- 
quest of Canaan, and the destruction of its cities by the fire of 
judgment (Matt. 10:15; ll:20ff.; Luke 10:12ff.;Deut.9:lff.; 
Matt. 24). The old Jerusalem now has the role of Canaan and is 
to be destroyed (Matt. 24). The whole world is the new Canaan, 
to be judged and conquered: 'Go ye into all the world. . . .' 
Both Exodus and Revelation conclude with the Tabernacle, the 
first with the type, the second with the reality." '7 

There are other parallels here as well. The Feast of Dedica- 
tion (Hanukkah) commemorated the cleansing of the Temple by 
Judas Maccabaeus in 164/165 b. c, after its defilement by Anti- 
ochus IV Epiphanes, when the Jews rejoiced "with thanksgiving, 
and branches of palm trees, and with harps, and cymbals, and 
with viols, and hymns, and songs: because there was destroyed a 
great enemy out of Israel" (1 Mac. 13:51). Jesus attended this 
feast (John 10:22), and on Palm Sunday He imitated Judas Mac- 
cabaeus's action by cleansing the Temple of its defilement by the 



16. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 44-46, 60. 

17,Rousas John Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel and 
Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1970] 1978), pp.l49f. 

217 



7:10 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

moneychangers (Matt. 21:12-13; Mark 11:15-17; Luke 19:45-46; 
cf. John 2:13-16). 

In paralleling the cleansing of the Temple, the scene of the 
redeemed multitude in Revelation also reverses the image; for, 
unlike the great multitude that greeted Jesus with palm branches 
(Matt. 21:8), but possessed only leaves and no fruit (Matt. 
21:19), the multitude of Revelation 7 is Christ's new nation, 
bearing fruit and inheriting the Kingdom (Matt. 21:43). That St. 
John intends us to see such a parallel is clear from the fact that 
the word translated palm (phoinix) occurs only two times in the 
New Testament -here, and in the story of Palm Sunday in the 
Gospel of John (12:13). 

10 Joining in the heavenly liturgy, the innumerable multi- 
tude shouts: Salvation (i.e., Hosannalcf. John 12:13) unto our 
God who sits on the Throne, and to the Lamb! - ascribing to 
God and to the Lamb what Rome claimed for the Caesars. 
Mark Antony said of Julius Caesar that his "only work was to 
save where anyone needed to be saved"; 18 and now Nero was on 
the throne, whom Seneca (speaking as "Apollo") had praised as 
the divine Savior of the world: 

He is like me in much, in form and appearance, in his poetry 
and singing and playing. And as the red of morning drives away 
dark night, as neither haze nor mist endure before the sun's rays, 
as everything becomes bright when my chariot appears, so it is 
when Nero ascends the throne. His golden locks, his fair counte- 
nance, shine like the sun as it breaks through the clouds. Strife, 
injustice and envy collapse before him. He restores to the world 
the golden age. 19 

In direct contradiction to the State-worshiping blasphemies 
of Rome and Israel, the Church declares that salvation is the 
province of God and His Son alone. In every age, this has been 
a basic issue. Who is the Owner and Determiner of reality? 
Whose word is law? Is the State the provider of salvation? For 



18. Ethelbert Stauffer, Christ and the Caesars (Philadelphia: The Westmin- 
ster Press, 1955), p. 52. 

19. Ibid., p. 139. Nero eventually repaid Seneca for a lifetime of servile idol- 
atry by ordering him to commit suicide. 

218 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:11-14 

us, as for the early Church, there is no safe middle ground be- 
tween faith and apostasy. 

11-12 The angels too are seen here in this heavenly worship 
service, encircling the congregation around the Throne and giv- 
ing a sevenfold blessing to God in praise — a blessing both pre- 
ceded and ended with an oath: Amen! Blessing and glory and 
wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power and might, be 
to our God forever and ever! Amen! As in many other Biblical 
descriptions of worship, the position of the worshipers is noted 
here: They fell on their faces before the Throne. Official, public 
worship in Scripture never shows the participants sitting at 
prayer; public prayer is always performed in the reverential po- 
sitions of standing or bowing down. The modern, nominalistic 
platonist, thinking himself to be more spiritually-minded than 
Biblical characters (even angels !), would respond that the bodily 
position is irrelevant, so long as the proper attitude is filling the 
heart. But this overlooks the fact that Scripture connects the at- 
titude of the heart with the attitude of the body. In public wor- 
ship, at the very least, our churches should follow the Biblical 
pattern of physical reverence in prayer. 

When rationalistic Protestants abandoned the use of the 
kneeling rail in worship, they contributed to the outbreaks of in- 
dividualistic pietism that have brought so much ruin to the 
Church. Man needs liturgy and symbolism. God created us that 
way. When the Church denies man this aspect of his God-given 
nature, he will seek to fulfill it by inadequate or sinful substi- 
tutes. A return to Biblically based liturgy is not a cure-all; but it 
will prove to be a corrective to the shallow, frenetic, and mis- 
placed "spirituality" that has been the legacy of centuries of li- 
turgical poverty. 

13-14 One of the elders now challenges St. John to tell him 
the identity of this great multitude from every nation. St. John 
confesses his inability, and the elder explains: These are the ones 
who come out of the Great Tribulation. While this text may and 
should be used to comfort Christians going through any period 
of suffering and persecution, its primary reference is to "the 
hour of testing, that hour which is about to come upon the 
whole world, to test those who dwell upon the Land" (3:10), the 

219 



7:13-14 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

"Great Tribulation" of which Jesus warned as He spoke to His 
disciples on the Mount of Olives (Matt. 24:21; Mark 13: 19) -a 
tribulation that He stated would take place during the then- 
existing generation (Matt. 24:34; Mark 13:30; Luke 21:32); the 
greatest tribulation that ever was, or ever will be (Matt. 24:21; 
Mark 13:19). 

The point, for the first-century Christians reading it, was 
that the Tribulation they were about to suffer would not destroy 
them. In facing persecution they were to see themselves, first, as 
"the Israel of God" (Gal. 6:16), sealed and protected; and sec- 
ond, as an innumerable, victorious multitude. As God saw 
them, they were not scattered, isolated groups of poor and per- 
secuted individuals accused as criminals by a merciless, demonic 
power-State; they were, rather, a vast throng of conquerors, 
who had washed their robes and made them white in the blood 
of the Lamb, standing before God's Throne and robed in the 
righteousness of Jesus Christ. St. John is probably drawing on 
the ordination-investiture ritual after the rigorous examination 
for the priesthood. First, the prospective priest was examined as 
to his geneology. "If he failed to satisfy the court about his per- 
fect legitimacy, the candidate was dressed and veiled in black, 
and permanently removed. If he passed that ordeal, inquiry was 
next made as to any physical defects, of which Maimonides 
enumerates a hundred and forty that permanently, and twenty- 
two which temporarily disqualified for the exercise of priestly 
office. . . . Those who had stood the twofold test were dressed 
in white raiment, and their names permanently inscribed." 20 The 
white robes of these priests thus correspond to the white robe of 
their High Priest; and just as His robe is said to be "dipped in 
blood," so theirs are washed and made white in the blood of the 
Lamb. 

In striking contrast to what some Christian groups in recent 
years have been taught, the early Church did not expect to be 
miraculously preserved from all hardship in this lif e. They knew 
that they would be called upon to suffer persecution (2 Tim. 
3:12) and tribulation (John 16:33; Acts 14:22; Rem. 5:3; 8:35; 



20. Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry and Set-vices as They Were 
at the Time of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing 
Co., 1980), p. 95; cf. Rev. 3:5. 

220 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:15-17 

Rev. 1:9). The Apostle Peter had already written to prepare the 
Church for the Great Tribulation: "Beloved, do not be surprised 
at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your 
testing, as though some strange thing were happening to you; 
but to the degree that you share the sufferings of Christ, keep on 
rejoicing; so that also at the revelation of His glory, you may re- 
joice with exultation" (1 Pet. 4:12-13). In a secondary sense, this 
is certainly applicable to Christians everywhere who suffer in 
tribulation. We are not to see salvation as a magic formula for 
trouble-avoidance. As the white-robed army of Christ, we are 
more than conquerors. Our calling is to endure and to overcome. 
In his influential study of the expansion of the early Church, 
Adolf Harnack wrote: 'The remarkable thing is that although 
Christians were by no means numerous till after the middle of 
the second century, they recognized that Christianity formed the 
central point of humanity as the field of political history as well 
as its determining factor. Such a self-consciousness is perfectly 
intelligible in the case of J udaism, for the J ews were really a 
large nation and had a great history behind them. But it is truly 
amazing that a tiny set of people should confront the entire 
strength of the Roman empire, that it should see in the persecu- 
tion of the Christians the chief role of that empire, and that it 
should make the world's history culminate in such a conflict. 
The only explanation of this lies in the fact that the Church sim- 
ply took the place of Israel, and consequently felt herself to be a 
people; this implied that she was also a political factor, and in- 
deed the factor which ranked as decisive alongside of the state 
and by which in the end the state was to be overcome." 21 

15-17 The elder continues his explanation: For this reason 
- because of their redemption and union with the Lamb 
through' His blood, they are before the Throne of God in wor- 
ship. Imitating the cherubim (4:8), these white-robed priests 
serve Him day and night in His Temple (cf. 1 Chron. 9:33; 
23:30; Ps. 134:1). They thus receive the most characteristic bless- 
ing of the Covenant, the Shadow of the Almighty: He who sits 



21. Adolf Harnack, The Mission and Expansion of Christianity in the First 
Three Centuries, James Moffatt, trans. (Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, [1908] 
1972), pp. 257f. 

221 



7:15-17 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

on the Throne shall spread His Tabernacle over them. This is re- 
ferring to shade provided by the Glory-Cloud, which hovered 
over both the earth at its creation (Gen. 1:2) and Israel in the 
wilderness (Deut. 32:10-11). 22 Filled with "many thousands of 
angels" (Ps. 68:17; cf. 2 Kings 6:17), the Cloud provided a winged 
shelter, "a refuge from the storm, a shade from the heat" (Isa. 
25:4; cf. Ps. 17:8;36:7;57:l;61:4;63:7;91:l-13;121:5-6). All this 
was summarized in a prophecy of the coming New Covenant 
Church: "When the Lord has washed away the filth of the 
daughters of Zion, and purged the blood of J erusalem from her 
midst by the Spirit of judgment and the Spirit of burning, then 
the Lord will create over the whole area of Mount Zion and 
over her assemblies a Cloud by day, even smoke, and the bright- 
ness of a flaming fire by night; for over all the glory will be a 
canopy" (Isa. 4:4-5; cf. 51:16). 

This Cloud/canopy of God's presence is also called a cover- 
ing (2 Sam. 22:12; Ps. 18:11; Lam. 3:44; Ps. 91:4), the same word 
used to describe the position of the carved cherubim that hov- 
ered over the Ark of the Covenant (Ex. 25:20). This term is also 
the word translated booths or tabernacles in Leviticus 23:33-43, 
where God commands His people to erect booths of leafy 
branches to dwell in during the Feast of Tabernacles. As the 
Restoration prophets saw, this feast was an acted-out prophecy 
of the conversion of all nations, the filling out of the Covenant 
people with the entire world. On the last day of the Feast of 
Tabernacles, God spoke through Haggai: "I will shake all the 
nations; and they will come with the wealth of all nations; and I 
will fill this House [the Temple] with glory" (Hag. 2:7).Zech- 
ariah too prophesied of the meaning of this feast in terms of the 
conversion of the nations and the sanctification of every area of 
life (Zech. 14:16-21). 

In the Last Days, during the celebration of the same feast, 
J esus Christ again set forth its meaning: the outpouring of the 
Spirit upon the restored believer, so that the Church becomes a 
means of restoration to the entire world. The promise of the 
Feast of Tabernacles was about to be fulfilled, after the glorious 
Ascension of the Son to the Throne: "Now on the last day, the 



22. See Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1980), pp. 13ff.;cf. Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 58ff. 

222 



THE TRUE ISRAEL 7:15-17 

great day of the feast, J esus stood and cried out, saying, 'If any 
man is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink. He who believes in 
Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of 
living water.' But this He spoke of the Spirit, whom those who 
believed in Him were to receive; for the Spirit was not yet given, 
because J esus was not yet glorified" (J ohn 7:37-39). 

St. J ohn's vision of the redeemed world reveals the inescap- 
able outcome of Christ's Ascension, the consummation of Para- 
dise: They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; neither 
shall the sun beat down on them, nor any heat; for the Lamb in 
the center of the Throne shall be their Shepherd, and shall guide 
them to the springs of the Water of Life; and God shall wipe 
away every tear from their eyes. We noted earlier the Father's 
words to the Son from Isaiah 49, giving the promise of the sal- 
vation of the world as well as Israel. The passage continues: 

I will keep You and give You for a covenant of the people, 

To restore the land, to make them inherit the desolate heritages; 

Saying to those who are bound: Go forth! 

To those who are in darkness: Show yourselves! 

Along the roads they will feed, 

And their pasture will be on all bare heights. 

They will not hunger or thirst, 

Neither will the scorching heat or sun strike them down; 

For He who has compassion on them will lead them, 

And will guide them to springs of water. 

And I will make all My mountains a road, 

And My highways will be raised up. 

Behold, these shall come from afar, 

And 10, these will come from the north and from the west, 

And these from the land of Sinim [China]. 

Shout for joy, O heavens! And rejoice, O earth! 

For the Lord has comforted His people, 

And will have compassion on His afflicted. (Isa. 49:8-13) 

The churches of the first century were on the brink of the 
greatest Tribulation of all time. Many would lose their lives, 
their families, their possessions. But St. J ohn writes to tell the 
churches that the Tribulation is not a death, but a Birth (cf. 
Matt. 24:8), the prelude to the establishment of the worldwide 
Kingdom of Christ. He shows them the scene on the other side: 

223 



7:15-17 PART THREE: THE SEVEN SEALS 

the inevitable victory celebration. 

In Nero's Circus Maximus, the scene of his bloody and re- 
volting slaughters of Christians — by wild beasts, by crucifixion, 
by fire and sword - there stood a great stone obelisk, silent wit- 
ness to the valiant conduct of those brave saints who endured 
tribulation and counted all things as loss for the sake of Christ. 
The bestial Nero and his henchmen have long since passed from 
the scene to their eternal reward, but the Obelisk still stands, 
now in the center of the great square in front of St. Peter's Basil- 
ica. Chiseled on its base are these words, taken from the over- 
coming martyrs' hymn of triumph: 

CHRISTUS VINCIT 
CHRISTUS REGNAT 
CHRISTUS IMPERAT 

— which is, being interpreted: Christ is conquering; Christ is 
reigning; Christ rules over all. 



224 



Part Four 

COVENANT SANCTIONS: 
THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

(Revelation 8-14) 

Introduction 

The fourth section of the standard treaty document dealt 
with the sanctions (curses and blessings) of the covenant (cf. 
Deut. 27:1 -30:20). 1 In Deuteronomy, these sanctions are set 
forth in the context of a ratification ceremony, in which the Cove- 
nant between God and the people is renewed. Moses instructed 
the people to divide into two groups, six tribes on Mount Geri- 
zim (the symbol of blessing) and six at an altar built on Mount 
Ebal (the symbol of cursing). The congregation was to take a 
solemn oath, repeating Amen as the Levites repeated the curses 
of the Covenant, calling down those curses upon themselves if 
they should ever forsake the law (Deut. 27:1-26). Moses made it 
clear that this Covenant oath involved not only the people who 
swore to it, with their wives, children, and servants, but also 
with the generations to come (Deut. 29:10-15). 

Deuteronomy 28 is practically the paradigmatic blessing/ 
curse section of the entire Bible. The blessings for obedience are 
listed in verses 1-14, and the curses for disobedience are enumer- 
ated (in more detail) in verses 15-68. The Jewish War by 
J osephus reads almost like a commentary on this passage, for 
the Great Tribulation culminating in the Fall of J erusalem in 
A.D. 70 and the subsequent scattering of the J ews throughout 
the earth was the definitive fulfillment of its curses. When the 



1. See Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Structure 
of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1963), 
pp. 121-34; cf. Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion By Covenant 
(Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

225 



PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Jewish mob was screaming for Jesus to be crucified, they in- 
voked the woes of this chapter: "All the people answered and 
said, 'His blood be on us and on our children!'" (Matt. 27:25). 
When the days of vengeance finally came to that generation, 
they were cursed in every aspect of life (Deut. 28:15-19); smitten 
with pestilence of every sort (Deut. 28:20-26); visited with 
plague, violence, and oppression (Deut. 28:27-37); struck by 
poor harvests, economic reversals, and the loss of their children 
(Deut. 28:38-48); beseiged by enemies and starved into cannibal- 
istic practices (Deut. 28:49-57); enslaved and scattered through- 
out the nations of the world, living in fear and despair night and 
day (Deut. 28:58-68). 

Moses warned that the Land of Israel would become a deso- 
lation if the people forsook the Covenant; like Sodom and 
Gomorrah, a monument to the judgment of God. "Now the 
generation to come, your sons who rise up after you and the for- 
eigner who comes from a distant land, when they see the plagues 
of the Land and the diseases with which the Lord has afflicted 
it, will say, 'All its land is brimstone and salt, a burning waste, 
unsown and unproductive, and no grass grows in it, like the 
overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboiim, 
which the Lord overthrew in His anger and in His wrath.' 

"And all the nations shall say, Why has the Lord done thus 
to this Land? Why this great outburst of anger?' Then men shall 
say, 'Because they forsook the Covenant of the Lord, the God 
of their fathers, which He made with them when He brought 
them out of the land of Egypt. And they went and served other 
gods and worshiped them, gods whom they have not known and 
whom He had not alloted to them. Therefore, the anger of the 
Lord burned against that Land, to bring upon it every curse 
that is written in this book; and the Lord uprooted them from 
their Land in anger and in fury and in great wrath, and cast 
them into another land, as it is this day"' (Deut. 29:22-28). 

The Seven Trumpets of Revelation announce that this judg- 
ment is about to be poured out upon Israel for her rejection of 
Christ. Throughout this section flies the Eagle-cherub with his 
cry of Woe, a reminder of the conquering nation warned of in 
Deuteronomy 28:49. The Eagle is a Biblical symbol of both Cov- 
enant blessing (cf. Ex. 19:4; Deut. 32:11) and Covenant curse (cf. 

226 



INTRODUCTION TO PART FOUR 

J er. 4:13; Hab. 1:8). Like the opening of Hosea's Sanctions/ 
Covenant Ratification section (Hos. 8:1), the Eagle in Revela- 
tion is connected with the blowing of Trumpets signaling disas- 
ter; yet the Eagle brings salvation as well to the faithful of the 
covenant (cf. Rev. 12: 14). 

As in Deuteronomy, this section of Revelation shows us two 
mountains: the Mount of Cursing in Chapter 8, which is ignited 
with coals from the altar and thrown into the Abyss; and the 
Mount of Blessing in Chapter 14, Mount Zion, where the Lamb 
meets with His army of 144,000, the Remnant from the Land of 
Israel. Deuteronomy 30:1-10 promises an ultimate restoration of 
the people, when God would truly circumcise their hearts, and 
when He would again abundantly bless them in every area of 
life. Kline comments: "As the development of this theme in the 
prophets shows, the renewal and restoration which Moses fore- 
tells is that accomplished by Christ in the New Covenant. The 
prophecy is not narrowly concerned with ethnic J ews but with 
the covenant community, here concretely denoted in its Old Tes- 
tament identity as Israel. Within the sphere of the New Cove- 
nant, however, the wall of ethnic distinctions disappears. Ac- 
cordingly, the Old Testament figure used here of exiled Israelites 
being regathered to Yahweh in J erusalem (v. 3b, 4; cf. 28:64) 
finds its chief fulfillment in the universal New Testament gather- 
ing of sinners out of the human race, exiled from Paradise, back 
to the Lord Christ enthroned in the heavenly Jerusalem." 2 

Thus, the central image of this section of Revelation is a Cov- 
enant ratification ceremony (Chapter 10), in which the Angel of 
the Covenant stands on the Sea and on the Land, lifting His 
right hand to heaven, swearing an oath and proclaiming the 
coming of the New Covenant, the inauguration of a new admin- 
istration of the world under "the Lord and His Christ; and He 
will reign forever and ever" (Rev. 11:15). 



2. Kline, pp. 132f. 

227 



8 
LITURGY AND HISTORY 

The Book is Opened (8:1-5) 

1 And when He broke the Seventh Seal, there was silence in 
heaven for about half an hour. 

2 And I saw the seven angels who stand before God; and 
Seven Trumpets were given to them. 

3 And another angel came and stood at the altar, holding a 
golden tenser; and much incense was given to him, that he 
might add it to the prayers of all the saints upon the golden 
altar which was before the throne. 

4 And the smoke of the incense, with the prayers of the saints, 
went up before God out of the angel's hand. 

5 And the angel took the tenser; and he filled it with the fire of 
the altar and threw it onto the Land; and there followed 
peals of thunder and voices and flashes of lightning and an 
earthquake. 

1-2 Finally, the Seventh Seal is broken, opening up to reveal 
the seven trumpets that herald the doom of J erusalem, the once- 
holy City which has become paganized and which, like its pre- 
cursor J ericho, will fall by the blast of seven trumpets (cf. J osh. 
6:4-5). But first, in this grand heavenly liturgy which makes up 
the Book of Revelation, there is silence in heaven for about half 
an hour. Milton Terry comments: "Perhaps the idea of this 
silence was suggested by the cessation of singers and trumpets 
when King Hezekiah and those with him bowed themselves in 
reverent worship (2 Chron. 29:28-29), and the half hour may 
have some reference to the offering of incense described in verses 
3 and 4, for that would be about the length of time necessary for 
a priest to enter the temple and offer incense and return (comp. 

229 



8:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Lev. 16:13-14; Luke 1:10,21)."' 

Alfred Edersheim's description of this Temple ceremony 
helps us understand the setting reflected here: "Slowly the in- 
censing priest and his assistants ascended the steps to the Holy 
Place, preceded by the two priests who had formerly dressed the 
altar and the candlestick, and who now removed the vessels they 
had left behind, and, worshipping, withdrew. Next, one of the 
assistants reverently spread the coals on the golden altar; the 
other arranged the incense; and then the chief officiating priest 
was left alone within the Holy Place, to await the signal of the 
president before burning the incense. It was probably while thus 
expectant that the angel Gabriel appeared to Zacharias [Luke 
1:8-11]. As the president gave the word of CGmmand, which 
marked that 'the time of incense had come,' 'the whole multi- 
tude of the people without' withdrew from the inner court, and 
fell down before the Lord, spreading their hands 2 in silent 
prayer. 

"It is this most solemn period, when throughout the vast 
Temple buildings deep silence rested on the worshiping multi- 
tude, while within the sanctuary itself the priest laid the incense 
on the golden altar, and the cloud of 'odours' [5:8] rose up be- 
fore the Lord, which serves as the image of heavenly things in 
this description." 3 

Following this awe-filled silence, the seven angels who stand 
before God 4 are given Seven Trumpets (the Temple liturgy used 
seven trumpets: 1 Chron. 15:24; Neh. 12:41). St. John seems to 
assume that we will recognize these seven angels; and well we 
should, for we have met them already. The letters of Revelation 
2-3 were written to "the seven angels" of the churches, and it is 
they who are represented here (granting, of course, that these 



1. Milton S. Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics: A Study of the Most Notable 
Revelations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: 
Eaton and Mains, 1898), pp. 343f. See also Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its 
Ministry and Services as They Were at the Time of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans, 1980), pp. 167f. 

2. Edersheim notes here that "the practice of folding the hands together in 
prayer dates from the fifth century of our era, and is of purely Saxon origin." 

3. Alfred Edersheim, The Temple, p. 167. 

4. Tobit 12:15 speaks of "the seven holy angels, which present the prayers of 
the saints, and which go in and out before the glory of the Holy One." 

230 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:3-5 

figures are not necessarily "identical" to the angels of the 
churches). They are clearly meant to be related t o each other, as 
we can see when we step back from the text (and our preconceived 
ideas) and allow the whole picture to present itself to us. When 
we do this, we see the Revelation structured in sevens, and in 
recurring patterns of sevens. One of those recurring patterns is 
that of seven angels (chapters 1-3, 8-11, 14, 15-16). J ust as earthly 
worship is patterned after heavenly worship (Heb. 8:5; 9:23-24), 
so is the government of the Church (Matt. 16:19; 18:18; J ohn 
20:23); moreover, according to Scripture, there are numerous 
correspondences between human and angelic activities (cf. 
21:17). Angels are present in the worship services of the Church 
(1 Cor. 11:10; Eph. 3:10) - or, more precisely, on the Lord's Day 
we are gathered in worship around the Throne of God, in the 
heavenly court. 

Thus we are shown in the Book of Revelation that the gov- 
ernment of the earthly Church corresponds to heavenly, angelic 
government, just as our official worship corresponds to that 
which is conducted around the heavenly Throne by the angels. 
Moreover, the judgments that fall down upon the Land are 
brought through the actions of the seven angels (again, we can- 
not divorce the human angels from their heavenly counterparts). 
The officers of the Church are commissioned and empowered to 
bring God's blessings and curses into fruition in the earth. 
Church officers are the divinely appointed managers of world 
history. The implications of this fact, as we shall see, are quite 
literally earth-shaking. 

3-5 St. John sees another angel standing at the heavenly 
altar of incense, holding a golden tenser. A large amount of in- 
cense, symbolic of the prayers of all the saints (cf. comments on 
5:8), is given to the angel that he might add it to the prayers of 
God's people, assuring that the prayers will be received as a 
sweet-smelling offering to the Lord. Then the smoke of the in- 
cense, with the prayers of the saints, ascends before God out of 
the angel's hand, as the minister offers up the petitions of his 
congregation. 

What happens next is amazing: The angel fills the tenser 
with coals of fire from the incense altar and casts the fire onto 
the earth in judgment; and this is followed by peals of thunder 

231 



8:3-5 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

and voices and flashes of lightning and an earthquake. These 
phenomena, of course, should be familiar to us as the normal 
accompaniments of the Glory-Cloud: "So it came about on the 
third day, when it was morning, that there were thunder and 
lightning flashes and a thick cloud upon the mountain and a 
very loud trumpet sound. . . . Now Mount Sinai was all in 
smoke because the Lord descended upon it in fire; and its 
smoke ascended like the smoke of a furnace, and the whole 
mountain quaked violently" (Ex. 19:16, 18). 

The irony of this passage becomes obvious when we keep in 
mind that it is a prophecy against apostate Israel. In the worship 
of the Old Testament, the fire on the altar of burnt offering orig- 
inated in heaven, coming down upon the altar when the Taber- 
nacle and the Temple were made ready (Lev. 9:24; 2 Chron.7:l). 
This fire, started by God, was kept burning by the priests, and 
was carried from place to place so that it could be used to start 
other holy fires (Lev. 16:12-13; cf. Num. 16:46-50; Gen. 22:6). 
Now, when God's people were commanded to destroy an apos- 
tate city, Moses further ordered : "You shall gather all its booty 
into the middle of its open square and burn all its booty with fire 
as a whole burnt offering to the Lord your God" (Deut. 13:16; 
J ud. 20:40; cf. Gen. 19:28). The only acceptable way to burn a 
city as a whole burnt sacrifice was with God's fire —firefwmthe 
altar. 5 Thus, when a city was to be destroyed, the priest would 
take fire from God's altar and use it to ignite the heap of booty 
which served as kindling, so offering up the entire city as a sacri- 
fice. It is this practice of putting a city "under the ban," so that 
nothing survives the conflagration (Deut. 13:12-18), that the 
Book of Revelation uses to describe God's judgment against 
Jerusalem. b 

God rains down His judgments upon the earth in specific 
response to the liturgical worship of His people. As part of the 
formal, official worship service in heaven, the angel of the altar 
offers up the prayers of the corporate people of God; and God 
responds to the petitions, acting into history on behalf of the 



5. To offer a sacrifice with "strange fire" (i.e., man-made fire, not from the 
altar) was punished with death: Lev. 10:1-4, 

6. For an in-depth study of this whole subject, see James B. Jordan, 
Sab bath- Breaking and the Death Penalty: A Theological Investigation (Tyler, 
TX: Geneva Ministries, 1986), esp. chaps. 3-5. 

232 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:3-5 

saints. The intimate connection between liturgy and history is an 
inescapable fact, one which we cannot afford to ignore. This is 
not to suggest that the world is in danger of lapsing into "non- 
being" when the Church's worship is defective. In fact, God will 
use historical forces (even the heathen) to chastise the Church 
when she fails to live up to her high calling as the Kingdom of 
priests. The point here is that the official worship of the cove- 
nantal community is cosmically significant. Church history is 
the key to world history: When the worshiping assembly calls 
upon the Lord of the Covenant, the world experiences His judg- 
ments. History is managed and directed from the altar of in- 
cense, which has received the prayers of the Church. 7 

In my distress I called upon the Lord, 

And cried to my God for help; 

He heard my voice out of His Temple, 

And my cry for help before Him came into His ears. 

Then the earth shook and quaked; 

And the foundations of the mountains were trembling 

And were shaken, because He was angry. 

Smoke went up out of His nostrils, 

And fire from His mouth devoured; 

Coals were kindled by it. 

He bowed the heavens also, and. came down 

With thick darkness under His feet. 

And He rode upon a cherub and flew; 

And He sped upon the wings of the wind. 

He made darkness His hiding place, His canopy around Him, 

Darkness of waters, thick clouds of the skies. 

From the brightness before Him passed His thick clouds, 

Hailstones and coals of fire. 

The Lord also thundered in the heavens, 

And the Most High uttered His voice, 

Hailstones and coals of fire. 

And He sent out His arrows, and scattered them, 

And lightning flashes in abundance, and routed them. 

Then the channels of waters appeared, 

And the foundations of the world were laid bare 

At Thy rebuke, O Lord, 

At the blast of the breath of Thy nostrils. (Psalm 18:6-15) 



7. The symbolic use of incense is therefore appropriate (but of course not 
binding) in the liturgy of the New Covenant. 

233 



8:3-5 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Several areas of the symbolic significance of trumpets are in 
view in this passage. First, trumpets were used in the Old Testa- 
ment liturgy for ceremonial processions, particularly as an 
escort for the Ark of the Covenant; the obvious, prime example 
of this is the march around J ericho before it fell (J osh. 6; cf. 1 
Chron. 15:24; Neh. 12:41). As G. B. Caird says, "J ohn must 
have had this story in mind when he wrote; for he tells us that 
with the blowing of the seventh trumpet the ark appeared 
(11:19), and also that one of the consequences of the trumpet 
blasts was that a tenth of the great city fell (11 :13)." 8 

Second, trumpets were blown to proclaim the rule of a new 
king (1 Kings 1:34, 39; cf. Ps. 47:5): "J ohn's seventh trumpet is 
the signal for the heavenly choir to sing their coronation an- 
them, praising God because He has assumed the sovereignty and 
begun to reign (11:15). " 9 

Third, the trumpet sounded an alarm, warning Israel of ap- 
proaching judgment and urging national repentance (Isa. 58:1; 
Jer. 4:5-8;6:l, 17; Ezek. 33:1-6; Joel 2:1, 15). "John too believed 
that the purpose of the trumpet blasts and the disasters they her- 
alded was to call men to repentance, even if that purpose was 
not achieved. The rest of mankind who survived these plagues 
still did not renounce the gods of their own making' (9:20; cf. 
Amos 4:6-11)."'° 

Fourth, Moses was instructed to use two silver trumpets 
both "for summoning the congregation" to worship and "for 
having the camps set out" in battle against the enemy (Num. 
10:1-9). It is significant that these two purposes, warfare and 
worship, are mentioned in the same breath. Gordon Wenham 
observes that "like the arrangement of the camp with the taber- 
nacle at the middle, and the ordering of the tribes in battle for- 
mation, the silver trumpets declare that Israel is the army of the 
King of kings preparing for a holy war of conquest." 11 The 
irony in Revelation, of course, is that God is now ordering the 
trumpets of holy war blown against Israel herself. 



8. G. B. Caird, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (New York: Harper 
& Row, Publishers, 1966), p. 108. 

9. Ibid. 

10. Ibid., p. 109. 

11. Gordon J. Wenham, Numbers: An Introduction and Commentary 
(Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press, 1981), p. 102. 

234 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:3-5 

Fifth, trumpets were also blown at the feasts and on the first 
day of every month (Num. 10:10), with special emphasis on 
Tishri 1, the civil New Year's Day (in the ecclesiastical year, the 
first day of the seventh month); this Day of Trumpets was the 
special liturgical acknowledgement of the Day of the Lord (Lev. 
23:24-25; Num. 29:1-6). Of course, the most basic background 
to all this is the Glory-Cloud, which is accompanied by angelic 
trumpet blasts announcing the sovereignty and judgment of the 
Lord (Ex. 19:16); the earthly liturgy of God's people was a reca- 
pitulation of the heavenly liturgy, another indication that God's 
redeemed people had been restored to His image. (This was the 
reason for the method Gideon's army used to rout the Midian- 
ites, in J udges 7:15-22: By surrounding the enemy with lights, 
shouting, and the blowing of trumpets, the Israelites were an 
earthly reflection of God's heavenly army in the Cloud, coming 
in vengeance upon God's enemies.) The Biblical symbolism 
would have been very familiar to St. J ohn's first-century read- 
ers, and "in any case J ohn himself has told them clearly enough 
that the trumpets were an escort for the ark, a proclamation of 
the divine sovereignty, and a summons to general repentance; 
and by placing them in the hands of the Angels of the Presence 
he has indicated their close association with worship." 12 

As J . Massyngberde Ford notes, 13 there are four striking "re- 
versals" in the text: 

1. From the Throne and altar, the "mercy seat," comes 
wrath; 

2. Incense, the "soothing aroma to the LoRD"{Lev.l:13), be- 
comes an agent of death (cf. 2 Cor. 2:14-16); 

3. The trumpets, which called Israel to worship, now be- 
come heralds of her destruction; 

4. The heavenly liturgy itself, appointed for Israel's sanctifi- 
cation, becomes the means of her overthrow and dissolution. 

The First Trumpet (8:6-7) 

6 And the seven angels who had the Seven Trumpets prepared 
themselves to sound them. 



12. Caird, p. 111. 

13. J . Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, ana 
Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday & CO., 1975), pp. 135f. 

235 



8:6-7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

7 And the first sounded, and there came hail and fire, mixed 
with blood, and they were thrown onto the Land; and a 
third of the Land was burned up, and a third of the trees 
were burned up, and all the green grass was burned up. 

6-7 Not only reminding us of the fall of J ericho, the judg- 
ments brought about by the sounding of these trumpets also are 
reminiscent of the plagues that came upon Egypt prior to the 
Exodus. Together, they are represented as destroying one third 
of the Land. Obviously, since the judgment is neither total nor 
final, it cannot be the end of the physical world. Nevertheless, 
the devastation is tremendous, and does work to bring about the 
end of the J ewish nation, the subject of these terrible proph- 
ecies. Israel has become a nation of Egyptians and Canaanites, 
and worse: a land of covenant apostates. All the curses of the 
Law are about to be poured out upon those who had once been 
the people of God (Matt. 23:35-36). The first four trumpets ap- 
parently refer to the series of disasters that devastated Israel in 
the Last Days, and primarily the events leading up to the out- 
break of war. 

As the Seal-judgments were counted in fourths, the Trumpet- 
judgments are counted in thirds. The First Trumpet sounds, and 
a triple curse (hail, fire, blood) is thrown down, affecting a third 
of the Land; three objects in particular are singled out. St. John 
sees hail and fire, mixed with blood, and they were thrown onto 
the Land. The blood of the slain witnesses is mixed with the fire 
from the altar, bringing wrath down upon the persecutors. The 
result of this curse, which has some similarities to the seventh 
Egyptian plague (Ex. 9:22-26), is the burning of a third of the 
Land and a third of the trees, and all the green grass (i.e., all the 
grass on a third of the Land; cf. 9:4). If the trees and grass repre- 
sent the elect remnant (as they seem to in 7:3 and 9:4), this indi- 
cates that they are not exempt from physical suffering and death 
as God's wrath is visited upon the wicked. Nevertheless, (1) the 
Church cannot be completely destroyed in any judgment (Matt. 
16:18), and (2) unlike the wicked, the Christian's ultimate destiny 
is not wrath but life and salvation (Rem. 2:7-9; 1 Thess. 5:9). 

To those pagans who scoffed that God had failed to rescue 
Christians from their enemies, St. Augustine replied: "The 
whole family of God, most high and most true, has therefore a 

236 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:6-7 

consolation of its own — a consolation which cannot deceive, 
and which has in it a surer hope than the tottering and falling 
affairs of life can afford. They will not refuse the discipline of 
this temporal life, in which they are schooled for life eternal; 
nor will they lament their experience of it, for the good things of 
life they use as pilgrims who are not detained by them, and its 
ills either prove or improve them. 

"As for those who insult over them in their trials, and when 
ills befall them say, 'Where is thy God?' [Ps. 42:10] we may ask 
them where their gods are when they suffer the very calamities 
for the sake of avoiding which they worship their gods, or main- 
tain they ought to be worshiped; for the family of Christ is fur- 
nished with its reply: Our God is everywhere present, wholly 
everywhere; not confined to any place. He can be present unper- 
ceived, and be absent without moving; when He exposes us to 
adversities, it is either to prove our perfections or correct our 
imperfections; and in return for our patient endurance of the 
sufferings of time, He reserves for us an everlasting reward. But 
who are you, that we should deign to speak with you even about 
your own gods, much less about our God, who is 'to be feared 
above all gods? For all the gods of the nations are idols; but the 
Lord made the heavens' [Ps. 96:4-5] ." 14 

The wicked, on the other hand, have only wrath and 
anguish, tribulation and distress ahead of them (Rem. 2:8-9). 
Literally, the vegetation of Judea, and especially of Jerusalem, 
would be destroyed in the Roman scorched-earth methods of 
warfare: "The countryside, like the city, was a pitiful sight, for 
where once there had been a multitude of trees and parks, there 
was now an utter wilderness stripped bare of timber; and no 
stranger who had seen the old Judea and the glorious suburbs of 
her capital, and now beheld utter desolation, could refrain from 
tears or suppress a groan at so terrible a change. The war had 
blotted out every trace of beauty, and no one who had known it 
in the past and came upon it suddenly would have recognized 
the place, for though he was already there, he would still have 
been looking for the city." 15 Yet this was only the beginning; 
many more sorrows — and much worse - lay ahead (cf. 16:21). 



14. St. Augustine, The City of God, i.29 (Marcus Dods, trans.; New York: 
The Modern Library, 1950, pp. 34f.). 

15. Josephus, The Jewish War, vi.i.l. 

237 



8:8-9 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

The Second Trumpet (8:8-9) 

8 And the second angel sounded, and something like a great 
mountain burning with fire was thrown into the sea; and a 
third of the sea became blood; 

9 and a third of the creatures that were in the sea and had life, 
died; and a third of the ships were destroyed. 

8-9 With the trumpet blast of the second angel, we see a par- 
allel to the first plague on Egypt, in which the Nile was turned to 
blood and the fish died (Ex. 7:17-21). The cause of this calamity 
was that a great mountain burning with fire was cast into the 
sea. The meaning of this becomes clear when we remember that 
the nation of Israel was God's "Holy Mountain," the "mountain 
of God's inheritance" (Ex. 15:17). As the redeemed people of 
God, they had been brought back to Eden, and the repeated use 
of mountain-imagery throughout their history (including the 
fact that Mount Zion was the accepted symbol of the nation) 
demonstrates this vividly. But now, as apostates, Israel had be- 
come a "destroying mountain," against whom God's wrath had 
turned. God is now speaking of Jerusalem in the same language 
He once used to speak of Babylon, a fact that will become cen- 
tral to the imagery of this book: 

Behold, I am against you, O destroying mountain, 

Destroyer of the whole earth, declares the Lord, 

And I will stretch out My hand against you, 

And roll you down from the crags 

And I will make you a burnt out mountain. . . . 

The sea has come up over Babylon; 

She has been engulfed with its tumultuous waves. 

(Jer. 51:25, 42) 

Connect this with the fact that J esus, in the middle of a 
lengthy series of discourses and parables about the destruction 
of J erusalem (Matt. 20-25), cursed an unfruitful fig tree, as a 
symbol of judgment upon Israel. He then told his disciples, 
'Truly I say to you, if you have faith, and do not doubt, you 
shall not only do what was done to the fig tree, but even if you 
say to this mountain, 'Be taken up and cast into the sea,' it shall 
happen. And all things you ask in prayer, believing, you shall 
receive" (Matt. 21:21-22). Was Jesus being flippant? Did He 

238 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:8-11 

really expect His disciples to go around praying about moving 
literal mountains? Of course not. More importantly, Jesus was 
not changing the subject. He was still giving them a lesson about 
the fall of Israel. What was the lesson? Jesus was instructing His 
disciples to pray imprecatory prayers, beseeching God to 
destroy Israel, to wither the fig tree, to cast the apostate moun- 
tain into the sea. 16 

And that is exactly what happened. The persecuted Church, 
under oppression from the apostate Jews, began praying for 
God's vengeance upon Israel (6:9-11), calling for the mountain 
of Israel to "be taken up and cast into the sea." Their offerings 
were received at God's heavenly altar, and in response God di- 
rected His angels to throw down His judgments to the Land 
(8:3-5). Israel was destroyed. We should note that St. John is 
writing this before the destruction, for the instruction and en- 
couragement of the saints, so that they will continue to pray in 
faith. As he had told them in the beginning, "Blessed is he who 
reads and those who hear the words of the prophecy, and keep 
the things that are written in it; for the time is near" (1:3). 

The Third Trumpet (8:10-11) 

10 And the third angel sounded, and a great star fell from 
heaven, burning like a torch, and it fell on a third of the 
rivers and on the springs of waters; 

11 and the name of the star is called Wormwood; and a third of 
the waters became wormwood; and many men died from the 
waters, because they were made bitter. 

10-U Like the preceding symbol, the vision of the Third 
Trumpet combines Biblical imagery from the fall of both Egypt 
and Babylon. The effect of this plague - the waters being made 
bitter- is similar to the first plague on Egypt, in which the water 
became bitter because of the multitude of dead and decaying 
fish (Ex. 7:21). The bitterness of the waters is caused by a great 
star that fell from heaven, burning like a torch. This parallels 
Isaiah's prophecy of the fall of Babylon, spoken in terms of the 



16. According to William Telford, this mountain was a standard expression 
among the Jewish people for the Temple Mount, "the mountain par 
excellence"; see The Barren Temple and the Withered Tree (Department of 

Biblical Studies, University of Sheffield, 1980), p. 119. 

239 



8:10-12 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

original Fall from Paradise: 

How you have fallen from heaven, 

Ostarof the morning, son of the dawn! 

You have been cut down to the earth, 

You who have weakened the nations! 

But you said in your heart, 

I will ascend to heaven, 

I will raise my throne above the stars of God, 

And I will sit on the mount of assembly, 

In the recesses of the north. 

I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; 

I will make myself like the Most High. 

Nevertheless you will be thrust down to Sheol, 

To the recesses of the pit. (Isa. 14:12-15) 

The name of this fallen star is Wormwood, a term used in 
the Law and the Prophets to warn Israel of its destruction as a 
punishment for apostasy (Deut. 29:18; Jer. 9:15; 23:15; Lam. 
3:15, 19; Amos 5:7). Again, by combining these Old Testament 
allusions, St. John makes his point: Israel is apostate, and has 
become an Egypt; Jerusalem has become a Babylon; and the 
covenant-breakers will be destroyed, as surely as Egypt and 
Babylon were destroyed. 

The Fourth Trumpet (8:12-13) 

12 And the fourth angel sounded, and a third of the sun and a 
third of the moon and a third of the stars were smitten, so 
that a third of them, might be darkened and the day might 
not shine for a third of it, and the night in the same way. 

13 And I looked, and I heard an Eagle flying in midheaven, 
saying with aloud voice, Woe; Woe; Woe to those who dwell 
on the Land, because of the remaining blasts of the Trumpet 
of the three angels who are about to sound! 

12 Like the ninth Egyptian plague of "thick darkness" (Ex. 
10:21-23), the curse brought by the fourth angel strikes the light- 
bearers, the sun, moon, and stars, so that a third of them might 
be darkened. The imagery here was long used in the prophets to 
depict the fall of nations and national rulers (cf. Isa. 13:9-11, 19; 
24:19-23; 34:4-5; Ezek. 32:7-8, 11-12; Joel 2:10, 28-32; Acts 
2:16-21). In fulfillment of this, Farrar observes, "ruler after 

240 



LITURGY AND HISTORY 8:13 

ruler, chieftain after chieftain of the Roman Empire and the 
Jewish nation was assassinated and ruined. Gaius, Claudius, 
Nero, Galba, Otho, Vitellius, all died by murder or suicide; 
Herod the Great, Herod Antipas, Herod Agrippa, and most of 
the Herodian Princes, together with not a few of the leading 
High Priests of Jerusalem, perished in disgrace, or in exile, or by 
violent hands. All these were quenched suns and darkened 



13 The flying Eagle-cherub (4:7) rules the Trumpets section 
of the Revelation (cf. Hos. 8:1), and it is appropriate that St. 
John now sees an Eagle flying in midheaven, warning of wrath 
to come. The Eagle, like many other covenantal symbols, has a 
dual nature. On one side, he signifies the salvation God provided 
for Israel: 

For the Lord's portion is His people; 

J acob is the allotment of His inheritance. 

He found him in a desert land, 

And in the howling waste of a wilderness; 

He encircled him, He cared for him, 

He guarded him as the pupil of His eye. 

Like an Eagle that stirs up its nest, 

That hovers over its young, 

He spread His wings and caught them, 

He carried them on His pinions. (Deut. 32:9-11; cf. Ex. 19:4) 

But the Eagle is also a fearsome bird of prey, associated with 
blood and death and rotting flesh: 

His young ones also suck up blood; 

And where the slain are, there is he. (Job 39:30) 

The prophetic warnings of Israel's destruction are often 
couched in terms of eagles descending upon carrion (Deut. 
28:49; Jer. 4:13; Lam. 4:19; Hos. 8:1; Hab. 1:8; Matt. 24:28). In- 
deed, a basic aspect of the covenantal curse is that of being 
devoured by the birds of the air (Gen. 15:9-12; Deut. 28:26, 49; 
Prov. 30:17; Jer. 7:33-34; 16:3-4; 19:7; 34:18-20; Ezek. 39:17-20; 



17. F. W. Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity (Chicago: Belford, Clarke 
and Co., Publishers, 1882), p. 519. 

241 



8:13 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Rev. 19:17-18). The Eagle-cherub will reappear in this section of 
Revelation as an image of salvation (12:14), and at the end will 
be replaced by (or seen again as) an angel flying in midheaven 
proclaiming the Gospel to those who dwell on the Land (14:6), 
for his mission is ultimately redemptive in its scope. But the sal- 
vation of the world will come about through Israel's fall (Rem. 
11:11-15, 25). So the Eagle begins his message with wrath, pro- 
claiming three Woes that are to come upon those who dwell on 
the Land. 

Like the original plagues on Egypt, the curses are becoming 
intensified, and more precise in their application. St. John is 
building up to a crescendo, using the three woes of the Eagle 
(corresponding to the fifth, sixth, and seventh blasts of the 
Trumpet; cf. 9:12; 11:14-15) to dramatize the increasing disasters 
being visited upon the Land of Israel. After many delays and 
much longsuffering by the jealous and holy Lord of Hosts, the 
awful sanctions of the Law are finally unleashed against the 
Covenant-breakers, so that Jesus Christ may inherit the king- 
doms of the world and bring them into His Temple (11:15-19; 
21 :22-27). 



242 



9 
ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 

The Fifth Trumpet (9:1-12) 

1 And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star from heaven 
which had fallen to the earth; and the key of the well of the 
Abyss was given to him. 

2 And he opened the well of the Abyss; and smoke went up 
out of the well, like the smoke of a burning furnace; and the 
sun and the air were darkened by the smoke of the well. 

3 And out of the smoke came forth locusts upon the earth; 
and power was given them, as the scorpions of the earth 
have power. 

4 And they were told that they should not hurt the grass of the 
earth, nor any green thing, nor any tree, but only the men 
who do not have the seal of God on their foreheads. 

5 And they were not permitted to kill anyone, but that they 
should be tormented for five months; and their torment was 
like the torment of a scorpion when it stings a man. 

6 And in those days men will seek death and will not find it; 
and they will long to die and death shall flee from them. 

7 And the appearance of the locusts was like horses prepared 
for battle; and on their heads, as it were, crowns like gold, 
and their faces were like the faces of men. 

8 And they had hair like the hair of women, and their teeth 
were like the teeth of lions. 

9 And they had breastplates like breastplates of iron; and the 
sound of their wings was like the sound of chariots, of many 
horses rushing to battle. 

10 And they have tails like scorpions, and stings; and in their 
tails is their power to hurt men for five months. 

11 They have as king over them, the angel of the Abyss; his 
name in Hebrew is Abaddon, and in the Greek he has the 
name Apollyon. 

12 The first Woe is past; behold, two Woes are still coming after 
these things. 

243 



9:1-6 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

1-6 With the first Woe, the plagues become more intense. 
While this curse is similar to the great swarms of locusts which 
came upon Egypt in the eighth plague (Ex. 10:12-15), these 
"locusts" are different: they are demons from the Abyss, the 
bottomless pit, spoken of seven times in Revelation (9:1,2, 11; 
11:7; 17:8; 20:1, 3). The Septuagint first uses the term in Genesis 
1:2, speaking of the original deep-and-darkness which the Spirit 
creatively overshadowed (and metaphorically "overcame"; cf. 
John 1:5). The Abyss is the farthest extreme from heaven (Gen. 
49:25; Deut. 33:13) and from the high mountains (Ps. 36:6). It is 
used in Scripture as a reference to the deepest parts of the sea 
(Job 28:14; 38:16; Ps. 33:7) and to subterranean rivers and 
vaults of water (Deut. 8:7; Job 38:16), whence the waters of the 
Flood came (Gen. 7:11; 8:2; Prov. 3:20; 8:24), and which nour- 
ished the kingdom of Assyria (Ezek.31:4, 15). The Red Sea 
crossing of the covenant people is repeatedly likened to a 
passage through the Abyss (Ps. 77:16; 106:9; Isa. 44:27; 51:10; 
63:13). The prophet Ezekiel threatened Tyre with a great desola- 
tion of the land, in which God would bring up the Abyss to 
cover the city with a new Flood, bringing its people down to the 
pit in the lower parts of the earth (Ezek. 26:19-21), and Jonah 
spoke of the Abyss in terms of excommunication from God's 
presence, a banishment from the Temple (Jon. 2:2-6). The do- 
main of the Dragon (Job 41:31; Ps. 148:7; Rev. 11:7; 17:8), the 
prison of the demons (Luke 8:31; Rev. 20:1-3; cf. 2 Pet. 2:4; 
Jude 6), and the realm of the dead (Rem. 10:7) are all called by 
the name Abyss. St. John is thus warning his readers that hell is 
about to break loose upon the Land of Israel; as with Tyre of 
old, the Abyss is being dredged up to cover the Land with its 
unclean spirits. Apostate Israel is to be cast out of God's pres- 
ence, excommunicated from the Temple, and filled with 
demons. One of the central messages of Revelation is that the 
Church tabernacles in heaven; the corollary of this is that the 
false church tabernacles in hell. 

Why does the locust plague last for five months? This figure 
is, first of all, a reference to the period of five months, from 
May through September, when locusts normally appeared. (The 
unusual feature is that these locusts remain for the entire period, 
engaging in constant torment of the population.) Second, this 
may refer in part to the actions of Gessius Florus, the procur- 

244 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:1-6 

ator of Judea, who for a five-month period (beginning in May 
of 66 with the slaughter of 3,600 peaceful citizens) terrorized the 
Jews, deliberately seeking to incite them to rebellion. He was 
successful: Josephus dates the beginning of the Jewish War from 
this occasion. 1 Third, the use of the term five is associated in 
Scripture with power, and specifically with military organization 
- the arrangement of the Israelite militia in a five-squad platoon 
formation (Ex. 13:18; Num. 32:17; Josh. 1:14; 4:12; Jud. 7:11; cf. 
2 Kings 1 :9ff.). 2 By God's direction, Israel was to be attacked by 
a demonic army from the Abyss. 

During the ministry of Christ, Satan had fallen to the earth 
like a star from heaven (cf. 12:4, 9, 12); and the key of the well 
of the Abyss was given to him. And he opened the well of the 
Abyss. What all this means is exactly what Jesus prophesied 
during His earthly ministry: the Land which had received the 
benefits of His work and then rejected Him, would become glut- 
ted with demons from the Abyss. We should note here that the 
key is given to Satan, for it is God who sends the demons as a 
scourge upon His rebellious people. 

The men of Nineveh shall stand up with this generation at the 
judgment, and shall condemn it because they repented at the 
preaching of J onah; and behold, something greater than J onah 
is here. The Queen of the South shall rise up with this generation 
at the judgment and shall condemn it, because she came from 
the ends of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and be- 
hold, something greater than Solomon is here. 

Now when the unclean spirit goes out of a man, it passes 
through waterless places, seeking rest, and does not find it. Then 
it says, "I will return to my house from which I came"; and when 
it comes, it finds it unoccupied, swept, and put in order. Then it 
goes, and takes along with it seven other spirits more wicked 
than itself, and they go in and live there; and the last state of that 
man becomes worse than the first. That is the way it will also be 
with this evil generation. (Matt. 12:41-45) 



1. Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, ii.xiv.9-xix.9. 

2. The Hebrew word in these texts is usually translated harnessed, armed, 
or in martial array, but the literal rendering is simply five in a rank (that is, five 
squads often men in each squad). See James B. Jordan, The Law of the Cove- 
nant: An Exposition of Exodus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Eco- 
nomics, 1984), pp. 264f.; idem, Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, 
TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985), p. 17. 

245 



9:7-12 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Because of Israel's rejection of the King of kings, the bless- 
ings they had received would turn into curses. Jerusalem had 
been "swept clean" by Christ's ministry; now it would become "a 
dwelling place of demons and a prison of every unclean spirit, 
and a prison of every unclean and hateful bird" (18:2). The en- 
tire generation became increasingly demon-possessed; their pro- 
gressive national insanity is apparent as one reads through the 
New Testament, and its horrifying final stages are depicted in 
the pages of Josephus' The Jewish War.the loss of all ability to 
reason, the frenzied mobs attacking one another, the deluded 
multitudes following after the most transparently false proph- 
ets, the crazed and desperate chase after food, the mass mur- 
ders, executions, and suicides, the fathers slaughtering their 
own families and the mothers eating their own children. Satan 
and the host of hell simply swarmed throughout the land of 
Israel and consumed the apostates. 

The vegetation of the earth is specifically exempted from the 
destruction caused by the "locusts." This is a curse on disobe- 
dient men. Only the Christians are immune to the scorpion-like 
sting of the demons (cf. Mk. 6:7; Lk. 10:17-19; Acts 26:18); the 
unbaptized Israelites, who do not have the seal of God on their 
foreheads (see on 7:3-8), are attacked and tormented by the 
demonic powers. And the immediate purpose God has in un- 
leashing this curse is not death, but merely torment, misery and 
suffering, as the nation of Israel was put through a series of 
demoniac convulsions. St. J ohn repeats what he has told us in 
6:16, that in those days men will seek death and will not find it; 
and they will long to die and death shall flee from them. J esus 
had specifically prophesied this longing for death among the 
final generation, the generation of J ews which crucified Him 
(Lk. 23:27-30). As the Wisdom of God had said long before: 
"He who sins against Me wrongs his own soul; all those who 
hate Me love death" (Prov.8:36). 

7-12 The description of the demon-locusts bears many simi- 
larities to the invading heathen armies mentioned in the proph- 
ets (Jer. 51:27; J oel 1:6; 2:4-10; cf. Lev. 17:7 and 2 Chron. 11:15, 
where the Hebrew word for demon is hairy one). This passage 
may also refer, in part, to the Satanic gangs of murderous 
Zealots that preyed on the citizens of J erusalem. As J osephus 
tells us, the people had more to fear from the Zealots than from 

246 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:7-12 

the Remans: "With their insatiable hunger for loot, they ran- 
sacked the houses of the wealthy, murdered men and violated 
women for sport; they drank their spoils with blood, and from 
mere satiety they shamelessly gave themselves up to effeminate 
practices, plaiting their hair and putting on women's clothes, 
drenching themselves with perfumes and painting their eyelids to 
make themselves attractive. They copied not merely the dress, but 
also the passions of women, devising in their excess of licentious- 
ness unlawful pleasures in which they wallowed as in a brothel. 
Thus they entirely polluted the city with their foul practices. Yet 
though they wore women's faces, their hands were murderous. 
They would approach with mincing steps, then suddenly become 
fighting men, and, whipping out their swords from under their 
dyed cloaks, they would run through every passerby. "3 

One particularly interesting point about the description of 
the demon army is St. J ohn's statement that the sound of their 
wings was like the sound of chariots, of many horses rushing to 
battle. That is the same sound made by the wings of the angels 
in the Glory-Cloud (Ezek. 1:24; 3:13; 2 Kings 7:5-7); the differ- 
ence here is that the noise is made by fallen angels. 

St. John goes on to identify the king of the demons, the 
angel of the Abyss, giving his name in both Hebrew (Abaddon) 
and Greek (Apollyon) — one of many indications of the essen- 
tially Hebraic character of the Revelation. 4 The words mean De- 
struction and Destroyer; Abaddon is used in the Old Testament 
for the realm of the dead, the "place of destruction" (Job 26:6; 
28:22; 31:12; Ps. 88:11; Prov. 15:11; 27:20). St. John thus pres- 
ents Satan as the very personification of death itself (cf. 1 Cor. 
10:10; Heb. 2:14). Clearly, for Satan's entire host of destroyers 
to be let loose upon the Jewish nation was a hell on earth in- 
deed. And yet St. John tells us that this outbreak of demons in 
the land is only the first Woe. Even this is not the worst, for two 
Woes (i.e., the sixth and seventh trumpets) are still coming after 
these things. 



3. FlaviusJ osephus, The Jewish War, iv.ix.10. 

4. For a lengthy discussion of St. John's grammar, with particular attention 
to the Hebraic style, see R. H. Charles, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary 
on the Revelation of St. John, 2 vols. (Edinburgh: T. &T. Clark, 1920), Vol. 1, 
pp. cxvii-clix. Charles's summary of the reason for St. John's unique style is 
that "while he writes in Greek, he thinks in Hebrew" (p. cxliii). 

247 



9:13 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

The Sixth Trumpet (9:13-21) 

13 And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the 
four horns of the golden altar which is before God, 

14 one saying to the sixth angel who had the trumpet: Release 
the four angels who are bound at the great river Euphrates. 

15 And the four angels, who had been prepared for the hour 
and day and month and year, were released, so that they 
might kill a third of mankind. 

16 And the number of the armies of the horsemen was myriads 
of myriads; I heard the number of them. 

17 And this is how I saw in the vision the horses and those who 
sat on them: They had breastplates of fire and of hyacinth 
and of brimstone; and the heads of the horses are like the 
heads of lions; and out of their mouths proceed fire and 
smoke and brimstone. 

18 A third of mankind was killed by these three plagues, by the 
fire and the smoke and the brimstone, which proceeded out 
of their mouths. 

19 For the power of the horses is in their mouths and in their 
tails; for their tails are like serpents and have heads; and 
with them they do harm. 

20 And the rest of the men, who were not killed by these 
plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands, so as not 
to worship demons, and the idols of gold and of silver and 
of brass and of stone and oT wood, which can neither see nor 
hear nor walk; 

21 and they did not repent of their murders nor of their sorcer- 
ies nor of their fornication nor of their thefts. 

13 Again we are reminded that the desolations wrought by 
God in the earth are on behalf of His people (Ps. 46), in 
response to their official, covenantal worship: the command to 
the sixth angel is issued by a voice from the four horns of the 
golden altar (i.e., the incense altar) which is before God. The 
mention of this point is obviously intended to encourage God's 
people in worship and prayer, assuring them that God's actions 
in history proceed from his altar, where He has received their 
prayers. St. John states that the voice came from the four horns 
(hornlike projections at each corner of the altar), referring to an 
important aspect of the Old Testament liturgy: the purification 
offering. This offering referred to the pollution and defilement 
of a place through sin. If the place defiled by sin is not purified, 

248 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:13 

death will result. In his excellent study of the Levitical system, 
Gordon Wenham tells us that "the purification offering dealt 
with the pollution caused by sin. If sin polluted the land, it de- 
filed particularly the house where God dwelt. The seriousness of 
pollution depended on the seriousness of the sin, which in turn 
related to the status of the sinner. If a private citizen sinned, his 
action polluted the sanctuary only to a limited extent. Therefore 
the blood of the purification offering was only smeared on the 
horns of the altar of burnt sacrifice. If, however, the whole na- 
tion sinned or the holiest member of the nation, the high priest, 
sinned, this was more serious. The blood had to be taken inside 
the tabernacle and sprinkled on the veil and the altar of incense." 5 

The sins of the nation were atoned for by offering a sacrifice 
on the brazen altar, then taking the blood and smearing it on the 
horns of the golden altar of incense (Lev. 4:13-21). In this way 
the altar was purified, so that the incense could be offered with 
the assurance that God would hear their prayers. The first- 
century readers of Revelation would have recognized the signifi- 
cance of this: God's command to His angels, in response to the 
prayers of His people, is spoken from the horns of the golden 
altar. Their sins have been covered, and do not stand in the way 
of free access to God. 

One further point should be observed. The prayers of the 
Church at the altar of incense are imprecatory prayers against 
the nation of Israel. The "Israel" that has rejected Christ is pol- 
luted and defiled (cf. Lev. 18:24-30), and its prayers will not be 
heard by God, for it has rejected the one atonement for sin. The 
unclean land of Israel will therefore be judged in terms of the 
curses of Leviticus 26, a chapter which repeatedly threatens a 
sevenfold judgment upon the nation if it becomes polluted by 
sin (Lev.26:18, 21, 24, 28; we have seen that this is the source for 
the repeated sevenfold judgments in the Book of Revelation). 
But the Church of Jesus Christ is the new Israel, the holy na- 
tion, the true people of God, who possess "confidence to enter 
the holy place by the blood of Jesus" (Heb. 10:19). Again, the 
first-century Church is assured by St. John that her prayers will 
be heard and answered by God. He will take vengeance upon 



5. Gordon J. Wenham, The Book of Leviticus (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1979), p. 96. 

249 



9:14-16 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

her persecutors, for the earth is both blessed and judged by the 
liturgical actions and judicial decrees of the Church. 

God's readiness to hear and willingness to grant His people's 
prayers are continually proclaimed throughout Scripture (Ps. 
9:10; 10:17-18; 18:3; 34:15-17; 37:4-5; 50:14-15; 145:18-19). God 
has given us numerous examples of imprecatory prayers, show- 
ing repeatedly that one aspect of a godly man's attitude is hatred 
for God's enemies and fervent prayer for their downfall and de- 
struction (Ps. 5:10; 10:15; 35:1-8, 22-26; 59:12-13; 68:1-4; 
69:22-28; 83; 94; 109; 137:8-9; 139:19-24; 140:6-11). Why then do 
we not see the overthrow of the wicked in our own time? An im- 
portant part of the answer is the unwillingness of the modern 
Church to pray Biblically; and God has assured us: You do not 
have because you do not ask (James 4:2). But the first-century 
Church, praying faithfully and fervently for the destruction of 
apostate Israel, had been heard at God's heavenly altar. His 
angels were commissioned to strike. 

14-16 The sixth angel is commissioned to release the four 
angels who had been bound at the great river Euphrates; they 
then bring against Israel an army consisting of myriads of myr- 
iads. The Euphrates River formed the boundary between Israel 
and the fearsome, pagan forces which God used as a scourge 
against His rebellious people. "It was the northern frontier of 
Palestine [cf. Gen. 15:18; Deut. 11:24; Josh. 1:4], across which 
Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian invaders had come to im- 
pose their pagan sovereignty on the people of God. All the 
scriptural warnings about a foe from the north, therefore, find 
their echo in John's bloodcurdling vision" (cf. Jer. 6:1,22; 10:22; 
13:20; 25:9, 26; 46:20,24; 47:2; Ezek. 26:7;38:6, 15; 39:2). 6 It 
should be remembered too that the north (the original location 
of Eden)' was the area of God's throne (Isa. 14:13); and both the 
Glory-Cloud and God's agents of vengeance are seen coming 
from the north, i.e., from the Euphrates (cf. Ezek. 1:4; Isa. 
14:31; Jer. 1:14-15). Thus, this great army from the north is God% 
army, and under His control and direction, although it is plainly 



6. G. B.Caird.p. 122. 

7. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 29f. 

250 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:17-19 

demonic and pagan in character (on the binding of fallen angels, 
cf. 2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6). God is completely sovereign, and uses 
both demons and the heathen to accomplish His holy purposes 
(1 Kings 22:20-22; Job 1:12-21; of course, He then punishes the 
heathen for their wicked motives and goals which led them to 
fulfill His decree: cf. Isa. 10:5-14). The angels bound at the 
Euphrates had been prepared for the hour and day and month 
and year, their role in history utterly predestined and certain. 

St. John hears the number of the horsemen: myriads of myr- 
iads. We noted in the Introduction to this volume some of the 
more fanciful interpretations of this expression (see pp. 11-13). If 
we keep our imaginations harnessed to Scripture, however, we 
will observe that it is taken from Psalm 68:17, which reads: "The 
chariots of God are double myriads, thousands of thousands. " 
Mounce correctly observes that "attempts to reduce this expres- 
sion to arithmetic miss the point. A 'double myriad of myriads' 
is an indefinite number of incalculable immensit y."8 The term 
simply means many thousands, and indicates a vast host that is 
to be thought of in connection with the Lord's angelic army of 
thousands upon thousands of chariots. 

17-19 Avoiding the dazzling technological speculations ad- 
vanced by some commentators, we will note simply that while 
the number of the army is meant to remind us of God's army, 
the characteristics of the horses - the fire and the smoke and the 
brimstone which proceeded out of their mouths - remind us of 
the Dragon, the fire-breathing Leviathan (Job 41:18-21). "The 
picture is meant to be inconceivable, horrifying, and even re- 
volting. For these creatures are not of the earth. Fire and sul- 
phur belong to hell (19:20; 21:8), just as the smoke is characteris- 
tic of the pit (9:2). Only monsters from beneath belch out such 
things." 9 Thus, to sum up the idea: An innumerable army is ad- 
vancing upon Jerusalem from the Euphrates, the origin of 
Israel's traditional enemies; it is a fierce, hostile, demonic force 
sent by God in answer to His people's prayers for vengeance. In 
short, this army is the fulfillment of all the warnings in the law 



8. Robert H. Mounce, TAeBook of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1977), p. 201. 

9. G. R. Beasley -Murray, The Book of Revelation (Grand Rapids: William 
B. Eerdmans Publishing CO., [1974] 1981), pp. 165f. 

251 



9:17-19 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

and the prophets of an avenging horde sent to punish the Cove- 
nant-breakers. The horrors described in Deuteronomy 28 were 
to be visited upon this evil generation (see especially verses 
49-68). Moses had declared: You shall be driven mad by the 
sight of what you see (Deut. 28:34). 

As it actually worked out in history, the Jewish rebellion in 
reaction to the "locust plague" of Gessius Florus during the 
summer of 66 provoked Cestius' invasion of Palestine in the 
fall', with large numbers of mounted troops from the regions 
near the Euphrates 10 (although the main point of St. John's ref- 
erence is the symbolic significance of the river in Biblical history 
and prophecy). After ravaging the countryside, his forces arriv- 
ed at the gates of Jerusalem in the month of Tishri - the month 
that begins with the Day of Trumpets. The army surrounded the 
city: "For five days the Remans pressed their attacks on all sides 
but made no progress; on the sixth, Cestius led a large force of 
picked men with the archers to an assault on the north side of 
the Temple. The Jews from the roof of the portico resisted the 
attack and repeatedly drove back those who reached the wall, 
but at length, overwhelmed by the hail of missiles, gave way. 
The front rank of the Remans then planted their bucklers 
against the wall and on those the second row rested theirs and so 
on, till they formed a protective covering known as 'the 
tortoise,' from which the missiles glanced off harmlessly, 
the soldiers undermined the wall and prepared to set fire to the 
gate of the Temple Mount. 

"Utter panic now seized the insurgents, and many now 
began to run from the city, believing that it would fall any 
minute. The people thereupon took heart again, and the more 
the wretches 1 1 gave ground, the nearer did the former advance 
to open the gates and welcome Cestius as a benefactor." 12 Then, 
at the very moment when complete victory was within his grasp, 
Cestius suddenly and inexplicably withdrew his forces. En- 
couraged, the Jews pursued the retreating soldiers and attacked 



10. See Josephus, The Jewish War, ii.xviii.9-xix.7 ; cf. J. Massyngberde 
Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and Commentary (Garden City, 
NY: Doubleday and Co., 1975), p. 154. 

1 1 . The Zealots, who were holding the city in defiance against Rome and 
against the wishes of the more prosperous and pacifistic among the Jews. 

12. Josephus, The Jewish War, ii.xix.5-6. 

252 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:20-21 

them, inflicting heavy casualties. Gaalya Cornfeld comments 
that "Cestius' failure transformed the revolt against Rome into a 
real war. A success so unexpected and sensational had naturally 
strengthened the hands of the war-party. The majority of the 
opponents to the revolt found themselves in a minority and 
tended to ally themselves with the winning Zealots, even though 
they did not believe that victory was possible. Nevertheless, al- 
though they did not proclaim themselves openly, they thought it 
more advisable to give the appearance of approval for fear of 
losing control over the people as a whole. Thus, the high- 
priestly circles and moderates, although notorious in their alle- 
giance to the side of peace, decided to assume the direction of 
the war which was now considered inevitable. . . . The respite 
gained by the Jews after Cestius' retreat to Syria was exploited 
to organize a national defense force." 13 

20-21 Yet the rest of the men, who were not killed by these 
plagues, did not repent ... so as not to worship demons and 
the idols. The Jews had so completely given themselves over to 
apostasy that neither God's goodness nor His wrath could turn 
them from their error. Instead, as Josephus reports, even up to 
the very end - after the famine, the mass murders, the cannibal- 
ism, the crucifixion of their fellow Jews at the rate of 500 per 
day - the Jews went on heeding the insane ravings of false 
prophets who assured them of deliverance and victory: "Thus 
were the miserable people beguiled by these charlatans and false 
messengers of God, while they disregarded and disbelieved the 
unmistakable portents that foreshadowed the coming desola- 
tion; but, as though thunderstruck, blind, senseless, paid no 
heed to the clear warnings of God." 14 

What "clear warnings" had God given them? Apart from the 
apostolic preaching, which was all they really needed (cf. Luke 
16:27-31), God had sent miraculous signs and wonders to testify 
of the coming judgment; Jesus had warned that, preceding the 
Fall of Jerusalem, "there will be terrors and great signs from 
heaven" (Luke 21:11). This was especially true during the festival 



13. Gaalya Cornfeld, cd., Joseph us: The Jewish War (Grand Rapids: Zon- 
dervan Publishing House, 1982), p. 201. 

14. Josephus, The Jewish War, vi.v.3. 

253 



9:20-21 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

seasons of the year 66, as Josephus reports: "While the people 
were assembling for the Feast of Unleavened Bread, on the 
eighth of the month Xanthicus [Nisan], at the ninth hour of the 
night [3:00 A. M.] so bright a light shone round the altar and 
Temple that it looked like broad daylight; and this lasted for 
half an hour. The inexperienced regarded it as a good omen, but 
it was immediately interpreted by the sacred scribes in conform- 
it y with subsequent events." lf 

During the same feast another shocking event took place: 
"The east gate of the inner sanctuary was a very massive gate 
made of brass and so heavy that it could scarcely be moved 
every evening by twenty men; it was fastened by iron-bound 
bars and secured by bolts that were sunk very deep into a thresh- 
old that was fashioned from a single stone block; yet this gate 
was seen to open of its own accord at the sixth hour of the night 
[midnight]. The Temple guards ran and reported the news to the 
captain and he came up and by strenuous efforts managed to 
close it. 16 To the uninitiated this also appeared to be the best of 
omens as they had assumed that God had opened to them the 
gate of happiness. But wiser people realized that the security of 
the Temple was breaking down of its own accord and that the 
opening of the gates was a present to the enemy; and they inter- 
preted this in their own minds as a portent of the coming desola- 
tion." 17 (A similar event, incidentally, happened in a.d. 30, 
when Christ was crucified and the Temple's outer veil — 24 feet 
wide and over 80 feet high! - ripped from top to bottom [Matt. 
27:50-54; Mark 15:37-39; Luke 23:44-47]: The Talmud records 
that in a.d. 30 the gates of the Temple opened by themselves, 
apparently due to the collapse of the overhead lintel, a stone 
weighing about 30 tons.) 18 

Those who were unable to attend the regular Feast of Pass- 
over were required to celebrate it a month later (Num. 9:9-13). 



15. Ibid. 

16. Presumably with the help of the two hundred gatekeepers who were on 
duty at the time. 

17. Josephus, vi,v.3. 

18. Yoma 39b; cf. Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the 
Messiah, 2 vols. (McLean, VA: MacDonald Publishing Co, n.d.), Vol. 2, pp. 
610 f.; Ernest L. Martin, The Place of Christ's Crucifixion (Pasadena: Founda- 
tion for Biblical Research, 1984), pp. 9-14. 

254 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:20-21 

Josephus reports a third great wonder that happened at the end 
of this Second Passover in 66: "A supernatural apparition was 
seen, too amazing to be believed. What I am now to relate 
would, I imagine, be dismissed as imaginary, had this not been 
vouched for by eyewitnesses, then followed by subsequent disas- 
ters that deserved to be thus signalized. For before sunset chariots 
were seen in the air over the whole country, and armed battalions 
speeding through the clouds and encircling the cities." 19 

A fourth sign occurred inside the Temple on the next great 
feast day, and was witnessed by the twenty-four priests who 
were on duty: "At the feast called Pentecost, when the priests 
had entered the inner courts of the Temple by night to perform 
their usual ministrations, they declared that they were aware, 
first, of a violent commotion and din, then of a voice as of a 
host crying, 'We are departing hence!'" 20 

There was a fifth sign in the heavens that year: "A star that 
looked like a sword stood over the city and a comet that continued 
for a whole year." 21 It was obvious, as Josephus says, that Jeru- 
salem was "no longer the dwelling place of God ," 22 Appealing four 
years later to the Jewish revolutionaries to surrender, he declared: 
"I believe that the Deity has fled from the holy places and stands 
now on the side of those with whom you are at war. Why, when 
an honorable man will fly from a wanton home and abhor its in- 
mates, do you think that God still remains with this household in 
its iniquity — God who sees each hidden thing and hears what is 
wrapped in silence?" 23 Yet Israel did not repent of her wicked- 
ness. Blind to her own evils and to the increasing judgments com- 
ing upon her, she remained steadfast in her apostasy, continuing 
to reject the Lord and cleaving in^ead to her false gods. 



19. Josephus, The Jewish War, vi,v,3, 

20. Ibid.; cf. the summary of these events by the Roman historian Tacitus: 
"In the sky appeared a vision of armies in conflict, of glittering armour, A sud- 
den lightning flash from the clouds lit up the Temple. The doors of the holy 
place abruptly opened, a superhuman voice was heard to declare that the gods 
were leaving it, and in the same instant came the rushing tumult of their de- 
parture" (Histories, v.13). 

21. Ibid. 

22. Ibid., v.i.3. 

23. Ibid., v.ix.4; cf. the discussion of these and related events of the Last 
Days in Ernest L. Martin, The Original Bible Restored (Pasadena: Foundation 
for Biblical Research, 1984), pp. 154-60. 

255 



9:20-21 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Did the Jews really worship demons and idols? We have al- 
ready noted (see on 2:9 and 3:9) the Satanic character of Jud- 
aism, which is not Old Testament religion, but is rather a false 
cult claiming Biblical authorization (just as Mormonism, the 
Unification Church, and other cults claim to be Biblical). As 
Herbert Schlossberg points out, "Idolatry in its larger meaning 
is properly understood as any substitution of what is created for 
the creator."2 4 By rejecting Jesus Christ, the Jews had inescap- 
ably involved themselves in idolatry; they had departed from the 
faith of Abraham and served gods of their own making. More- 
over, as we shall see, the Jewish idolatry was not some vague, 
undefined, apostate "theism." Forsaking Christ, the Jews ac- 
tually became worshipers of Caesar. 

Josephus bears eloquent testimony to this, writing repeat- 
edly of God's wrath against the apostasy of the Jewish nation as 
the cause of their woes: "These men, therefore, trampled upon 
all the laws of man, and laughed at the laws of God; and as for 
the oracles of the prophets, they ridiculed them as the tricks of 
jugglers; yet did these prophets foretell many things concerning 
the rewards of virtue, and punishments of vice, which when 
these zealots violated, they occasioned the fulfilling of those 
very prophecies belonging to their own country." 25 

"Neither did any other city ever suffer such miseries, nor did 
any age ever breed a generation more fruitful in wickedness than 
this was, from the beginning of the world." 26 

"I suppose that had the Remans made any longer delay in 
coming against these villains, the city would either have been 
swallowed up by the ground opening upon them, or been over- 
flowed by water, or else been destroyed by such thunder as the 
country of Sodom perished by, for it had brought forth a genera- 
tion of men much more atheistical than were those that suffered 
such punishments; for by their madness it was that all the people 
came to be destroyed." 27 

"When the city was encircled and they could no longer 
gather herbs, some persons were driven to such terrible distress 



24. Herbert Schlossberg, Idols for Destruction: Christian Faith and Its 
Confrontation with American Society (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 
1983), p. 6. 

25. Josephus, The lewish War, iv.vi.3. 

26. Ibid., v.x.5. 

27. Ibid., v.xiii.6. 

256 



ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE 9:20-21 

that they searched the common sewers and old dunghills of cat- 
tle, and ate the dung they found there; and what they once could 
not even look at they now used for food. When the Remans 
barely heard this, their compassion was aroused; yet the rebels, 
who saw it also, did not repent, but allowed the same distress to 
come upon themselves; for they were blinded by that fate which 
was already coming upon the city, and upon themselves also." 28 
I srael 's idols are said to be of gold and of silver and of brass 
and of stone and of wood, a standard Biblical accounting of the 
materials used in the construction of false gods (cf. Ps. 115:4; 
135 :15; Isa. 37:19). The Bible consistently ridicules men's idols as 
the works of their hands, mere stocks and stones which can 
neither see nor hear nor walk. This is an echo of the Psalmist's 
mockery of heathen idols: 

They have mouths, but they cannot speak; 
They have eyes, but they cannot see; 
They have ears, but they cannot hear; 
They have noses, but they cannot smell; 
They have hands, but they cannot feel; 
They have feet, but they cannot walk; 
They cannot make a noise with their throat, 

Then comes the punchline: 

Those who make them will become like them, 
Everyone who trusts in them. (Ps. 115:5-8; cf. 135:16-18) 

Schlossberg comments: "When a civilization turns idola- 
trous, its people are profoundly changed by that experience. In 
a kind of reverse sanctification, the idolater is transformed into 
the likeness of the object of his worship. Israel 'went after 
worthlessness, and became worthless' (Jer. 2:5)." 29 As the 
prophet Hosea thundered, Israel's idolaters "became as detest- 
able as that which they loved" (Hos. 9: 10). 

St. John's description of Israel's idolatry is in line with the 
usual prophetic stance; but his accusation is an even more direct 
reference to Daniel's condemnation of Babylon, specifically 



28. Ibid., v.xiii.7. 

29. Schlossberg, p. 295. 



257 



9:20-21 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

regarding its worship of false gods with the holy utensils from 
the Temple. Daniel said to king Belshazzar: "You have exalted 
yourself against the Lord of heaven; and they have brought the 
vessels of His House before you, and you and your nobles, your 
wives and your concubines have been drinking wine from them; 
and you have praised the gods of silver and gold, of bronze, 
iron, wood, and stone, which do not see, hear, or understand. 
But the God in whose hand are your life-breath and your ways, 
you have not glorified" (Dan. 5:23). 

St. John's implication is clear: Israel has become a Babylon, 
committing sacrilege by worshiping false gods with the Temple 
treasures; like Babylon, she has been "weighed in the balance 
and found wanting"; like Babylon, she will be conquered and 
her kingdom will be possessed by the heathen (cf. Dan. 5:25-31). 

Finally, St. John summarizes Israel's crimes, all stemming 
from her idolatry (cf. Rem. 1:18-32): This led to her murders of 
Christ and the saints (Acts 2:23, 36; 3:14-15; 4:26; 7:51-52, 
58-60); her sorceries (Acts 8:9, 11; 13:6-11; 19:13-15; cf. Rev. 
18:23; 21:8; 22:15); her fornication, a word St. John uses twelve 
times with reference to Israel's apostasy (2:14; 2:20; 2:21; 9:21; 
14:8; 17:2 [twice]; 17:4; 18:3 [twice]; 18:9; 19:2); and her thefts, a 
crime often associated in the Bible with apostasy and the result- 
ant oppression and persecution of the righteous (cf. Isa. 61:8; 
Jer. 7:9-10; Ezek. 22:29; Hos. 4:1-2; Mark 11:17; Rem. 2:21; 
James 5:1-6). 

Throughout the Last Days, until the coming of the Remans, 
the trumpets had blown, warning Israel to repent. But the alarm 
was not heeded, and the Jews became hardened in their impeni- 
tence. The retreat of Cestius was of course taken to mean that 
Christ's prophecies of Jerusalem's destruction were false: The 
armies from the Euphrates had come and surrounded Jerusalem 
(cf. Luke 21 :20), but the threatened "desolation" had not come 
to pass. Instead, the Remans had fled, dragging their tails be- 
tween their legs. Increasingly confident of divine blessing, the 
Jews recklessly plunged ahead into greater acts of rebellion, un- 
aware that even greater forces beyond the Euphrates were being 
readied for battle. This time, there would be no retreat. Judea 
would be turned into a desert, the Israelites would be slaugh- 
tered and enslaved, and the Temple would be razed to the 
ground, without a stone left upon another. 

258 



10 
THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 

The Witness to the New Creation (10:1-7) 

1 And I saw another strong Angel coming down out of 
heaven, clothed with a cloud; and the rainbow was on His 
head, and His face was like the sun, and His legs like pillars 
of fire; 

2 and He had in His hand a little book that was open. And He 
placed His right foot on the Sea and His left on the Land; 

3 and He cried out with a loud voice, as when a Lion roars; 
and when He had cried out, the seven peals of thunder ut- 
tered their voices. 

4 And when the seven peals of thunder had spoken, I was 
about to write; and I heard a Voice from heaven saying: Seal 
up the things that the seven peals of thunder have spoken, 
and do not write them. 

5 And the Angel whom I saw standing on the Sea and on the 
Land lifted up His right hand to heaven, 

6 and swore by Him who lives forever and ever, who created 
heaven and the things in it, and the earth and the things in it, 
and the sea and the things in it, that there shall be delay no 
longer, 

7 but in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he is 
about to sound, then the Mystery of God is accomplished, 
as He preached the Gospel to His servants the prophets. 

1 The strong Angel can be none other than Jesus Christ 
Himself, the "Angel of the Lord" who appeared in the Old Tes- 
tament. This will be clear enough if the description of this Angel 
is compared with that of Christ in 1:14-16, and of God on His 
throne in Ezekiel 1:25-28. There are, however, further indica- 
tions of the divine identity of this strong Angel. 

First, the Angel is seen clothed with a cloud - an expression 

259 



10: 1 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

that should call to mind the Glory-Cloud. And while the Cloud 
is filled with innumerable angels (Deut. 33:2; Ps. 68:17), there is 
only One who could be said to be clothed with it. Compare 
Psalm 104:1-3: 

Lord my God, Thou art very great; 

Thou art clothed with splendor and majesty, 

Covering Thyself with light as with a cloak, 

Stretching out heaven like a tent curtain - 

The One who lays the beams of His upper chambers in the waters; 

Who makes the clouds His chariot; 

Who walks upon the wings of the wind. . . . 

The basic reference for this, of course, is the fact that God 
was indeed "clothed with the Cloud" in the Tabernacle (cf. Ex. 
40:34-38; Lev. 16:2). This could not be said of any created angel. 
To be clothed with the Cloud is to be clothed with the entire 
court of heaven; it is, in fact, the created angels who form the 
Cloud. Jesus Christ is wearing the host of heaven (cf. Gen. 
28:12; Jn. 1:51). 

Second, the Angel had the rainbow upon His head. We have 
seen the rainbow already in 4:3, around the throne of God; and 
Ezekiel says of the One whom he saw enthroned that "there was 
a radiance around Him. As the appearance of the rainbow in 
the clouds on a rainy day, so was the appearance of the sur- 
rounding radiance. Such was the appearance of the likeness of 
the glory of the Lord" (Ezek. 1:27-28). 

Third, the Angel's face was like the sun. This fits the descrip- 
tion of Christ in 1:16, and in Matthew 17:2, the account of 
Christ's transfiguration (cf. Ezek. 1:4, 7, 27; Acts 26:13; 2 Cor. 
4:6). He is "the Sun of righteousness" (Mai. 4:2), "the Sunrise 
from on high" (Lk. 1:78; cf. Ps. 84:11; 2 Pet. 1:16-19). In particu- 
lar, the imagery of the sun and sunrise - as we have already 
noted with the words day and light — is often used to describe 
the glory of God shining in judgment (cf. Ps. 19:4-6; Ezek. 43:2; 
Zech. 14:7; Mai. 4:1-3; Rem. 13:12); and the "flaming fire" of 
judgment is spoken of by Paul as Christ's "face" and "glory" 
(2 Thess 1:7-9).' This is especially appropriate here, since Christ 



1. Cf. Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1980), pp. 108, 121. 

260 



THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 10:2-3 

has come to St. John to announce the annihilation of Jerusalem. 
Fourth, His legs were like pillars of fire. This refers to some 
of the most complex imagery in all the Bible. Obviously, the 
phrase is intended to remind us of "the pillar of fire and cloud" 
- the Glory-Cloud of the Exodus (Ex. 14:24). As we have seen, 
it is the Lord who "wears" the Cloud (Deut. 31:15), and the 
Cloud is also identified as the Angel of the Lord (Ex. 32:34; 
33:2; Num. 20:16). It appears that the dual aspect of the Cloud 
(the smoke and the fire) symbolically represented God's legs. 
Thus, the Lord walked before the people in the Cloud (Ex. 
13:21-22; 14:19, 24; 23:20, 23); He came in the Cloud and stood 
before them (Ex. 33:9-10; Num. 12:5; Hag. 2:5). In terms of this 
imagery, the Bride describes the Bridegroom's legs as "pillars" 
(Cant. 5:15). We should also note that the dual nature of the 
pillar, representing the legs of God, was incorporated into the 
architecture of the Temple (1 Kings 7:15-22; 2 Chron. 3:15-17); 
thus "the ark of the covenant located beneath the enthroned 
Glory is accordingly called God's footstool (Isa. 60:13)." 2 The 
significance of all this, and its relationship to the passage as a 
whole, will become apparent below. Enough has been seen, 
however, to demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt that this 
rainbow-haloed, Cloud-clothed Angel coming down out of 
heaven is (or represents) the Lord Jesus Christ. 

2-3 The Angel, holding a little book, 3 then placed His right 
foot on the Sea and His left on the Land. H. B. Swete com- 
ments: 'The Angel's posture denotes both his colossal size and 
his mission to the world: 'sea and land' is an O.T. formula for 
the totality of terrestrial things (Ex. 20:4,11; Ps. 69:34)." 4 We 
might modify this point with the observation that in the Bible, 
and especially in the Book of Revelation, "Sea and Land" seems 
to represent the Gentile nations contrasted with the Land of 



2. Ibid., p. 19; cf. 1 Chron. 28:2; Ps. 99:5;132:7. In the larger, cosmic Tem- 
ple ("the heavens and the earth"), the earth is called God's footstool (Isa. 66:0, 
and thus the earth is said to have pillars (1 Sam. 2:8; Job 38:4-6; Ps. 75:3; 
104:5; Isa. 51:13, 16; 54:11), and sockets to hold the pillars (Job 38:6; the same 
word is used for the pillar sockets in the tabernacle, in Num. 3:36-37; 4:31-32). 

3. The meaning of the little scroll will be discussed below, in connection 
with v. 8-11. 

4. Henry Barclay Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
Kregel Publications, 3rd cd., [1911] 1977), p. 127. 

261 



10:4 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Israel (2 Sam. 22:4-5; Ps. 65:7-8; Isa. 5:30; 17:12-13; 57:20; Jer. 
6:23; Lk. 21:25; Rev. 13:1, 11). Thus, this picture does contain a 
cosmic, worldwide import; but its meaning, as we shall see fur- 
ther on, is tied up with the fact that Christ is standing on Israel 
and the nations (cf. v. 5-7). 

And He cried out with a loud Voice, as when a Lion 5 roars; 
by now, of course, we are familiar with the great Voice coming 
from the Cloud; as Kline says, the Voice "is characteristically 
loud, arrestingly loud. It is likened to the crescendo of ocean 
and storm, the rumbling roar of earthquake. It is the noise of 
war, the trumpeting of signal horns and the din of battle. It is 
the thunder of the storm-chariot of the warrior-Lord, coming in 
judgments that convulse creation and confound the kings of the 
nations." 6 In worshipful response to His Voice, the seven peals 
of thunder uttered their voices. This sevenfold thunder is itself 
identified with the Voice in Psalm 29, where some of its phe- 
nomenal effects are noted: It shatters cedars in pieces, rocks 
whole nations with earthquakes, shoots forth mighty bolts of 
lightning, cracks open the very bowels of the earth, causes ani- 
mals to calve, and topples the trees, stripping entire forests bare. 
This adds a dimension to our understanding of the nature of the 
Voice that issues from the Cloud: It consists of the heavenly an- 
tiphony in which the angelic chorus answers the declarations of 
the Sovereign Lord. 

4 Of course, everyone wants to know: What did the seven 
thunders sayl An astounding amount of scholarly ink has been 
wasted on the solution of this problem. But, in this life at least, 
we can never know the answer. St. J ohn was about to write 
down what the thunders had spoken, when he heard a Voice 
from heaven saying: Seal up the things that the seven thunders 
have spoken, and do not write them. The message was intended 
for St. John's ears only. It was not intended for the Church at 
large. But what is important here is that God wanted St. John to 
record the fact that he was not supposed to reveal whatever the 
seven thunders said. God wanted the Church lo know that there 



5. Here is yet another identification of the Angel with Christ: He is the Lion 
who "has overcome so as to open the Book" (Rev. 5:5). 

6. Kline, p. 101. 

262 



THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 10:4 

are some things (many things, actually) that God has no inten- 
tion of telling us beforehand. 

This serves well as a rebuke to the tendency of most sermons 
and commentaries on this book — that of a curious searching 
into those things that God has not seen fit to reveal. "The secret 
things belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed be- 
long to us and to our sons forever, that we may observe all the 
words of this law" (Deut. 29:29). In other words, "Man has been 
given the law, which he must obey. He has been told what the 
consequences of obedience and disobedience are. More than 
that, man does not need to know."7 R. J. Rushdoony writes: 
"Man is more often prompted by curiosity than by obedience. 
. . . For every question a pastor receives about the details of 
God's law, he normally receives several which express little more 
than a curiosity about God, the life to come, and other things 
which are aspects of 'the secret things which belong to God.'. . . 
As against curiosity and a probing about 'secret things,' we are 
plainly commanded to obey God's law and to recognize that the 
law gives us a knowledge of the future which is legitimate." 8 

In the final chapter of the book St. John is commanded: "Do 
not seal up the words of the prophecy of this book, for the time 
is near" (22:10); the message of the Book of Revelation as a 
whole is contemporary in nature, referring to events about to 
take place. In contrast, however, the message of the Seven 
Thunders points us to the far distant future: Daniel was told to 
"conceal these words and seal up the book until the time of the 
end" (Dan. 12:4), for the reason that the time of its fulfillment 
was not at hand. Similarly, when St. John is instructed to seal up 
the words spoken by the Thunders, it is another indication that 
the purpose of Revelation is not "futuristic"; the prophecy re- 
fers to the time of the establishment of the New Covenant, and 
points beyond itself to a "time of the end" that was still very dis- 
tant to St. John and his readers. We are thus taught two things: 
First, the Book of Revelation is a contemporary prophecy, con- 
cerned almost entirely with the redemptive-eschatological events 
of the first century; second, the events of the first century were 



7. Rousas John Rushdoony, Salvation and Godly Rule (Vallecito, CA: Ross 
House Books, 1983), p. 388. 

8. Ibid. 

263 



10:5-7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

not exhaustive of eschatology. Contrary to the theories of those 
interpreters who would style themselves as "consistent preter- 
ists," the Fall of Jerusalem did not constitute the Second Com- 
ing of Christ, the end of the world, and the final resurrection. 
There is more to come. 9 

5-7 St. John now shows us Christ's purpose in revealing 
Himself in this way: The Angel lifted up His right hand to 
heaven (the proper stance for a witness in a court of law: Gen. 
14:22; Ex. 6:8; Deut. 32:40; Ezek. 20:5-6; Dan. 12:7) and swore 
an oath. Some commentators have taken this fact as their basis 
for holding that this Angel is not Christ, apparently regarding 
swearing as somehow below His dignity or out of character. One 
wonders, in response, about the soundness of these commentat- 
ors' views regarding the doctrines of the Trinity and Christ's deity. 
For, assuredly, the Lord God swears oaths throughout Holy 
Scripture (cf. Gen. 22:16; Isa. 45 :23; J er. 49:13; Amos 6:8), and 
in fact our salvation is based on God's faithfulness to His cove- 
nant oath, the ground of the Christian's assurance and hope 
(Heb. 6:13-20). 

We must observe carefully that Christ is presented here in 
the position of a witness, as St. John has informed us on two oc- 
casions already (1:5; 3:14). This is the point at which the various 
details of the vision converge. We have noted some of the signi- 
ficance of His legs appearing like pillars of fire (v. 1), and this 
must be further developed. For, in the first place, pillars are 
used in Biblical symbolism and ritual as witnesses (cf. Gen. 
31:45, 52; Deut. 27:1-8; Josh. 8:30-35; 22:26-28, 34; 24:26-27). 
Similarly, the two stone tablets containing the Ten Command- 
ments served as witnesses (Deut. 31:26), legal documents of tes- 
timony to the covenant stipulations. Thus the law is called the 
Testimony (Ex. 16:34; 25:16, 21-22; 32:15; 34:29; Lev. 16:13; 



9. See, e.g., Max R. King, The Spirit of Prophecy (n.p., 1971). While 
King's work has a great deal of value for the discerning student, its ultimate 
thesis - that there is no future Coming of Christ or Final Judgment - is hereti- 
cal. Historic, orthodox Christianity everywhere, with one voice, has always 
taught that Christ "shall come again, with glory, to judge both the living and 
the dead" (Nicene Creed). This is a non-negotiable article of the Christian 
faith. Cf. David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 138-48. 

264 



THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 10:5-7 

24:3; Num. 1:50, 53; 4:5; J osh. 4:16; 2 Kings 11:12). 10 When God 
stood in the dual pillar of cloud/fire before Israel at the 'tent of 
testimony" (Num. 9:15; 10:11), He was identifying Himself as 
the Witness to the Covenant (cf. 1 Sam. 12:5; J er. 29:23; 42:5; 
Mic.l:2; Mai. 2:14). 

The Angel-Witness swears that there shall be delay n no 
longer, but in the days of the seventh angel, when he is about to 
sound, then the Mystery of God is accomplished. The word 
Mystery does not mean something "mysterious" in our modern 
sense, but rather "something formerly concealed and now un- 
veiled." u It is revelation: knowledge that God formerly with- 
held, but has now "revealed to His holy apostles and prophets in 
the Spirit" (Eph. 3:5), a mystery "that has been hidden from the 
past ages and generations, but has now been manifested to His 
saints" (Col.l:26). This "Mystery" is a major aspect of the let- 
ters to the Ephesians and Colossians: the union of believing 
Jews and Gentiles in one Church, without distinction; "that the 
Gentiles are fellow heirs and fellow members of the body, and 
fellow partakers of the promise in Jesus Christ through the Gos- 
pel" (Eph. 3:6). Gentiles, who had been strangers and aliens 
from the commonwealth of Israel and from the covenantal 
promises, are now, through the work of Christ, full sons of 
Abraham, heirs of the Covenant, on an equal and indistinguish- 
able standing with believing Jews (Eph. 2:11-22; Gal. 3). They 
form one "new man," one Church, one Body of Christ, in the 
one New Covenant. And this one covenantal Kingdom, the ful- 
fillment of the Old Testament promises, will have universal do- 
minion: All nations will now flow to the Mountain of the Lord, 
as the kingdoms of the world become the one Kingdom of Christ 
(11:15). The Mystery of God, the universalization of the King- 
dom of God, is to be accomplished - as He preached the Gos- 



10. Meredith G. Kline, The Structure of Biblical Authority (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1975), pp. 113-30. The law required two 
witnesses (Deut. 17:6; 19:15), and, as we have noted in the Introduction, the 
two tablets were duplicate copies of the covenant. 

1 1 . "The sense here is not an abolition of time and its replacement by time- 
lessness, but 'no more time' from the words of the angel until the completion 
of the divine purpose." James Barr, Biblical Words for Time (Naperville, IL: 
Alec R. Allenson Inc., rev. ed. 1969), p. 80. 

12. F. F. Bruce, Commentary on the Epistle to the Colossians (Grand 
Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1957), p. 218. 

265 



10:5-7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

pel 13 to His servants the prophets. The Mystery is simply the 
revelation of the message of the Gospel. 

This is why the Angel stands as witness on the Sea and on the 
Land (cf. v. 2), a fact that is repeated for emphasis in verse 5. 
The Angel takes the oath with His pillar-legs planted on Israel 
and the nations, proclaiming the New Covenant which will unite 
the two into one new nation in Christ. Moreover, He swears in 
the name of the Creator: by Him who lives forever and ever, 
who created heaven and the things in it, and the earth and the 
things in it, and the sea and the things in it (cf. Ex. 20:11; Ps. 
146:6; Neh. 9:6). The Angel swears in this manner because He is 
standing as divine Witness to the New Creation. The details of 
the passage remind us of two other "New Creation" events: the 
covenant with Noah (the rainbow) and the covenant at Sinai 
(the pillar of fire). Both of these recalled how 'the Spirit at the 
beginning overarched creation as a divine witness to the Cove- 
nant of Creation, as a sign that creation existed under the aegis 
of his covenant lordship. Here is the background for the later 
use of the rainbow as a sign of God's covenant with the earth." 14 
"At the ratification of the old covenant at Sinai, this cloud-pillar 
form of theophany represented God standing as witness to his 
covenant with Israel. Once again at the ratification of the new 
covenant at Pentecost, it was God the Spirit, appearing in phe- 
nomena that are to be seen as a New Testament version of the 
Glory-fire, who provided the confirmatory divine testimony." 15 

Thus, we have seen several Biblical ideas joining together at 
this point to form a consistent pattern: covenant, oath, crea- 
tion, testimony, and witness. The Spirit, appearing as the origi- 
nal cloudy pillar of fire, was present at the original creation, and 
then at the later re-creation events in the history of redemption: 
the Flood, the Exodus, the erection of the Tabernacle and the 
Temple, and the Day of Pentecost. The coming of the Spirit at 
Pentecost was prophetically described by J oel in terms of the 
Glory-Cloud: "I will display wonders in heaven and on earth: 



13. "Preached the Gospel," rather than "declared" or "preached," is the lit- 
eral translation of the Greek text. 

14. Kline, Images of the Spirit, pp. 19f. 

15. Meredith G. Kline, Kingdom Prologue, Volume I (privately published 
syllabus, 1981), p. 28. Kline also points out (pp. 5f.) that the words oath and 
covenant are often used interchangeably (cf. Deut. 29:12; Ezek. 16:8). 

266 



THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 10:5-7 

blood, fire, and pillars of smoke" (Joel 2:30); and the Apostle 
Peter, quoting Joel's statement, declared that the Pentecost event 
was the fulfillment of the ancient prophecy (Acts 2:16-21). 16 

The various creation-events thus interpret and are re-inter- 
preted by each other. That the covenants were made in terms of 
the creation shows them to be provisional re-creations which 
point to the final New Creation in Christ (2 Cor. 5:17; Eph. 
4:24). And that the creation accounts use covenantal language 
and settings (witness-pillar, oath, and testimony) shows it to 
have been a covenant (i.e., if covenants are re-creations, then 
the creation was covenantal). 1 7 

Another motif common to creation and covenant is the sab- 
batical form in which both are structured. 18 The entire book of 
Revelation is, as we have previously noted, structured in sevens, 
revealing its nature as a record of a covenant-making process; 
and here we see 'the Mystery of God" declared to be completed 
with the sounding of the Seventh Trumpet. The Sabbath "is a day 
of divine action featuring divine judgment with the penetration 
of the darkness by the light of the theophanic glory, it is a day of 
creating heaven and earth and consummating a temple of God 
made in the likeness of the Glory, it is a day of the revelation of 
the sovereign glory of the covenant Lord. Taken together, the 
seven days are the fulness of time of creation, the sevenfold ful- 
ness of the day of the Lord. In redemptive re-creation, the day 
of the Lord, wherein the old passes away and all is created anew, 
is again a fulness of time, in which, as Paul declares, all the mys- 
tery of God comes finally into eschatological realization" (see 
Gal. 4:4; Eph. 1:9-10; cf. Matt. 13:11-17; Mk. 1:15; Col. 1:15-20; 
Rev. 10:7). 19 

Revelation 10 thus serves to introduce us to the first great 
climax of the prophecy: the announcement of the destruction of 
J erusalem. And through its use of multi-layered Biblical im- 
agery it declares the fall of J erusalem to bean inescapable aspect 
of the great and final Covenant-making event. The sounding of 



16. No other construction may legitimately be placed upon the apostle's 
words. The coming of the Spirit was the fulfillment of Joel 2:28-32. "The Last 
Days" had arrived. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 115-22. 

17. See Kline, Kingdom Prologue, Vol. I, pp. 33f. 

18. Ibid., p. 33. 

19. Kline, Images of the Spirit, pp. 114f. 

267 



10:8-10 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

the seventh angel will be the irrefutable sign that the promised 
New Creation, the New Covenant, is an accomplished fact. The 
great Mystery of God - the completion and filling of His new and 
final Temple - will have been revealed to the world (11:15-19). 

The Bittersweet Book (10:8-11) 

8 And the Voice which 1 had heard from heaven, I heard again 
speaking with me, saying: Go, take the book that is open in 
the hand of the Angel who stands on the Sea and on the 
Land. 

9 And I went to the Angel, telling Him to give me the little 
book. And He said to me: Take it, and eat it; and it will 
make your stomach bitter, but in your mouth it will be sweet 
as honey. 

10 And I took the little book out of the Angel's hand and ate it, 
and it was in my mouth sweet as honey; and when I had 
eaten it, my stomach was made bitter. 

11 And they said to me: You must prophesy again concerning 
many peoples and nations and tongues and peoples. 

8-10 The instructions to take and eat the book held by the 
Angel are based on a similar incident in the life of Ezekiel, who 
was commanded to eat a scroll symbolizing the prophetic de- 
nunciation of the "rebellious house" of Israel (2:8-10; 3:1-3). 
This reference enables us to identify the book given to St. J ohn 
as his commission, based on the New Covenant, to prophesy 
"lamentations, mourning and woe" against apostate Israel. The 
book is thus, essentially, the Book of Revelation itself. As with 
Ezekiel, the Covenant Lawsuit tasted to St. J ohn as sweet as 
honey (cf. Ezek. 3:3), but his stomach was made bitter (cf. 
Ezek. 3:14). This should not be difficult to understand. St. J ohn 
was called to prophesy about the victory of the Church and of 
the kingdom of God. A necessary corollary to the triumph of 
the righteous is the destruction of the wicked. The pattern holds 
throughout Scripture in the history of salvation: The same judg- 
ments that deliver us also destroy God's enemies. "Salvation and 
judgment are two aspects of the same event ," 20 Old Israel had 
turned from the true God to worship idols and demons; she had 
become a harlot and a persecutor of the saints, and had to be 



20. See R. J. Rushdoony, Salvation and Godly Rule,pp. 19ff.,140f. 

268 



THE FAITHFUL WITNESS 10:11 

destroyed. And while St. J ohn could rejoice in the victory of the 
Church over her enemies, it would still be a wrenching experi- 
ence to see the once-holy city levelled to rubble, the Temple torn 
down and burned to ashes, and hundreds of thousands of his 
relatives and countrymen starved and tortured, murdered, or 
sold into slavery. All the prophets experienced this same emo- 
tional wrenching - which did not usually involve a rebellion 
against their calling (J onah is a notable exception), but rather a 
deeply rooted recognition of the two-edged nature of prophecy, 
of the fact that the same "Day of the Lord" would bring both 
immeasurable blessing and unspeakable woe (cf. Amos 5:18-20). 
It should be noted further, however, that a vast chasm separates 
the prophets from many of their interpreters in our own day. 
For while modern theologians will affect a weepy attitude over 
the sufferings of "humanity" in general, or in the abstract, the 
prophets suffered from no such humanitarian impulses. 21 The 
prophets grieved over the disobedient children of the Covenant. 
The bitterness St. J ohn will experience is not over the fate of the 
Roman Empire. He grieves for Israel, considered as the Cove- 
nant people. They are about to be disinherited and executed, 
never to be restored as the Covenant nation .22 The divorce of old 
Israel is necessary in God's plan of redemption, and St. John 
both welcomes it and proclaims it with vigorous joy. Yet there is 
legitimate sorrow for the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 

1 1 In the Old Testament background of the Book of Revela- 



21. For an incisive analysis of humanitarianism, see Herbert Schlossberg, 
Idols for Destruction: Christian Faith and Its Confrontation with American 
Society (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1983), pp. 39-87. 

22. That Israel will someday repent and turn to Christ is, to me, indisput- 
able (Rem. 11; cf. Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 125-31). That is not at issue 
here. The point remains, however, that in order to be restored to the Covenant, 
Jews must join the Church of Jesus Christ along with everyone else. Israel will 
never have a covenantal identity distinct from the Church. For more in-depth 
discussions of the place of Israel in prophecy, see (in ascending levels of com- 
plexity) Iain Murray, The Puritan Hope: Revival and the Interpretation of 
Prophecy (Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1971); John Murray, The 
Epistle to the Remans, 2 vols. (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publish- 
ing Co., [1959, 1965] 1968), Vol. 2, pp. 65-108; Willem A. VanGemeren, "Israel 
as the Hermeneutical Crux in the Interpretation of Prophecy" (I), Westminster 
Theological Journal 45 (1983), pp. 132-44; idem, "Israel as the Hermeneutical 
Crux in the Interpretation of Prophecy" (II), Westminster Theological Journal 
46 (1984), pp. 254-297. 

269 



10:11 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

tion, the Angel of the Lord is identified as the original Prophet 
(cf. Ex. 23:20-23; Deut. 18:15-19). 2i As such, He raised up and 
commissioned other prophets in His image, reproducing Him- 
self in them (Ex. 3:2ff.; 33:14; 34:5ff.; 29-35; 2 Ki. 1:3, 15; 
1 Chron. 21:18). For this reason, the prophets are often called 
angels (messengers), expressing their re-creation in the image of 
the divine Prophet-Angel (2 Chron. 36:15-16; Hag. 1:13; Mai. 
3:1).24 The same pattern is continued here: the Angel-Prophet, 
who proclaims His message while straddling the inhabited earth, 
commissions St. John to prophesy again concerning many peo- 
ples and nations and tongues and kings. St. John's prophecy 
regarding the destruction of Israel and the establishing of the 
New Covenant will encompass the nations of the world. Christ 
has announced the Gospel, the message of the universal sway of 
the Kingdom, to "His servants the prophets" (v. 7), and now His 
servant John is to extend the proclamation of that Gospel to all 
nations. Christ has redeemed men from every nation (7:9). The 
mighty Roman Empire itself is ultimately an instrument of 
God's will (17:16-17), eventually to be crushed and cast away 
when its usefulness has ceased (19:17-21; cf. Dan. 2:44). "The 
kingdoms of the world are but the scaffolding for God's spiritual 
temple, to be thrown down when their purpose is accom- 
plished." 25 



23. See Kline's discussion of this in Images of the Spirit, pp. 75-81, 91-95. 

24. Ibid., pp. 57ff. 

25. Thomas V. Moore, A Commentary on Haggai and Malachi (London: 
The Banner of Truth Trust, [1856] 1968), p. 80. 

270 



11 

THE END OF THE BEGINNING 

The Two Witnesses Against Jerusalem (11:1-14) 

1 And there was given me a reed like a staff, and someone 
said: Rise and measure the Temple of God, and the altar, 
and those who worship in it. 

2 And cast out the court that is outside the Temple, and do not 
measure it; for it has been given to the nations; and they will 
tread under foot the Holy City for forty-two months. 

3 And I will grant authority to My two Witnesses, and they 
will prophesy for twelve hundred and sixty days, clothed in 
sackcloth. 

4 These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands that 
stand before the Lord of the earth. 

5 And if anyone desires to harm them, fire proceeds out of 
their mouth and devours their enemies; and if anyone would 
desire to harm them, in this manner he must be killed. 

6 These have the power to shut up the sky, in order that rain 
may not fall during the days of their prophesying; and they 
have power over the waters to turn them into blood, and to 
smite the earth with every plague, as often as they desire. 

7 And when they have finished their testimony, the Beast that 
comes up out of the Abyss will make war with them, and 
overcome them and kill them. 

8 And their dead bodies will lie in the street of the Great City 
which Spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also 
their Lord was crucified. 

9 And those from the peoples and tribes and tongues and na- 
tions will look at their dead bodies for three and a half days, 
and will not permit their dead bodies to be laid in a tomb. 

10 And those who dwell on the Land will rejoice over them and 
make merry; and they will send gifts to one another, because 
these two prophets tormented those who dwell on the Land. 

271 



11:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

1 1 And after the three and a half days the breath of life from 
God came into them, and they stood on their feet; and great 
fear fell upon those who were beholding them. 

12 And they heard a loud voice from heaven saying to them: 
Come up here. And they went up into heaven in the Cloud, 
and their enemies beheld them. 

13 And in that Day there was a great earthquake, and a tenth of 
the City fell; and seven thousand people were killed in the 
earthquake, and the rest were terrified and gave glory to the 
God of heaven. 

14 The Second Woe is past; the Third Woe, behold, is coming 
quickly. 

1-2 St. John is commanded to measure the Temple of God 
(literally, the inner sanctuary of the Temple, the holy place), and 
the altar, and those who worship in it. The imagery is taken 
from Ezekiel 40-43, where the angelic priest measures the ideal 
Temple, the New Covenant people of God, the Church (cf. 
Mark 14:58; John 2:19; 1 Cor. 3:16; Eph. 2:19-22; 1 Tim. 3:15; 
Heb. 3:6; 1 Pet. 2:5; Rev. 3:12). R. J. McKelvey explains how 
the idea of the Temple is interpreted in the Letter to the 
Hebrews: "According to the writer to the Hebrews the sanctuary 
in heaven is the pattern (typos), i.e., the original (cf. Ex. 25:8f .), 
and the one on earth used by Jewry is a 'copy and shadow' (Heb. 
8:5, RSV). The heavenly sanctuary is therefore the true sanc- 
tuary (Heb. 9:24). It belongs to the people of the new covenant 
(Heb. 6:19-20). Moreover, the fact that Christ our High Priest is 
in this sanctuary means that we, although still on earth, already 
participate in its worship (10:19ff.,12:22flf.). What is this Tem- 
ple? The writer supplies a clue when he says that the heavenly 
sanctuary was cleansed (9:23), i.e. made fit for use (cf. Num. 
7:1). The assembly of the firstborn (Heb. 12:23), that is to say, 
the Church triumphant, is the heavenly Temple."] 

That this is St. John's meaning as well should be clear from 
what we have already seen, for much of the action in this book 
has either taken place in, or originated from, the inner sanc- 
tuary. Moreover, those who worship at the incense altar in the 
Holy Place are priests (Ex. 28:43; 29:44): St. John has told us 



1. R. J. McKelvey, "Temple," in J. D. Douglas, ed., The New Bible Dic- 
tionary (William B. Eerdmans Publishing CO., [1962] 1965), p. 1249. 

272 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:1-2 

that we area kingdom of priests (1:6; 5:10; cf. Matt. 27:51; Heb. 
10:19-20), and he has shown us God's people offering up their 
prayers on the altar of incense (5:8; 6:9-10; 8:3-4). 

St. John is to measure the inner court, the Church, but he is 
to cast out the court that is outside the Temple, and is specific- 
ally commanded: Do not measure it. Measuring is a symbolic 
action used in Scripture to "divide between the holy and the pro- 
fane" and thus to indicate divine protection from destruction 

(see Ezek. 22:26; 40-43; Zech. 2:1-5; cf. Jer. 10:16;51:19; Rev. 
21:15-16). "Throughout Scripture the priests are those who mea- 
sure out the dimensions of the temple of God, the man with the 
measuring rod of Ezekiel 40ff. being but the most prominent ex- 
ample. Such measuring, like witness-bearing, entails seeing, and 
is the precondition of judging, as we have seen these in God's 
covenant actions in Genesis 1. The priestly aspect of measuring 
and witnessing can be seen in that it correlates to guarding, 
because it sets up and establishes boundaries, and bears witness 
regarding whether or not those boundaries have been observed. 
We might say that the kingly function has to do with filling, and 
the priestly with separating, the former with cultivation and the 
latter with jealousy, propriety, and protection." 2 

Between the Sixth and Seventh Seals, the 144,000 saints of the 
True Israel were protected from the coming judgment (7:1-8). 
That action is paralleled hereby St. J ohn's measuring of the in- 
ner court between the sixth and seventh Trumpets, now protect- 
ing the True Temple from the outpouring of God's wrath. The 
outer court (the "court of the Gentiles") accordingly represents 
apostate Israel (cf. Isa. 1:12), which is to be cut off from the 
number of the faithful Covenant people, God's dwellingplace. 
St. J ohn, as an authoritative priest of the New Covenant, is 
commanded to cast out (excommunicate) the unbelievers. This 
verb (ekballo) is generally used in the Gospels for casting out 
evil spirits (cf. Mark 1:34, 39; 3:15; 6:13); it is also used for 
Christ's ejection of the moneychangers from the Temple (Matt. 
21:12; Mark 11:15; J ohn 2:15). Jesus warned that unbelieving 
Israel as a whole would be cast out from the Church, while be- 



2. J ames B. J ordan, "Rebellion, Tyranny, and Dominion in the Book of 
Genesis/'inGary North, ed., Tactics of Christian Resistance, Christianity and 
Civilization No. 3 (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1983), p. 42. 

273 



11:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

lieving Gentiles would stream into the Kingdom and receive the 
blessings promised to the Seed of Abraham: 

Strive to enter by the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will 
seek to enter and will not be able, once the head of the house gets 
up and shuts the door, and you begin to stand outside and knock 
on the door, saying, "Lord, open uptous!" 

And He will answer and say to you, "I do not know where 
you are from." 

Then you will begin to say, "We ate and drank in Your pres- 
ence, and You taught in our streets!" 

And He will say, "I tell you, I do not know where you are 
from! Depart from Me, all you evildoers!" 

There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth there when you 
see Abraham and Isaac and J acob and all the prophets in the 
Kingdom of God, but yourselves being cast out [ekballo]. And 
they will come from east and west, and from north and south, 
and will recline at the Table in the Kingdom of God. (Luke 
13:24-29; cf. Matt. 8:11-12) 

Unbelieving Israel has been excluded from the protective 
measuring, for it has been given to the nations; and they will 
tread under foot the holy city for forty-two months (see Luke 
21:24). God guarantees His protection to the Church, but Jeru- 
salem has been delivered up to destruction. Forty-two months 
(which equals 1,260 days and three and a half years) is taken 
from Daniel 7:25, where it symbolizes a limited period during 
which the wicked are triumphant; it also speaks of a period of 
wrath and judgment due to apostasy, a reminder of the three 
and a half years of drought between Elij ah's first appearance 
and the defeat of Baal on Mount Carmel (1 Kings 17-18; cf. 
James 5:17). Whereas seven is used to represent wholeness and 
completion, three and a half appears to be a broken seven: sad- 
ness, death, and destruction (cf. Dan. 9:24; 12:7; Rev. 12:6, 14; 
13:5). The periods of time mentioned in the Trumpets section are 
arranged chiastically, another indication of their symbolic nature: 

A. 11:2 - forty-two months 

B. 11:3 - twelve hundred and sixty days 
C. 11:9 - three and a half days 
C. 11:11 -three and a half days 
B. 12:6 - twelve hundred and sixty days 
A. 13:5 - forty-two months 

274 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:1-2 

This kind of imagery is used throughout the Bible. 3 In his 
Gospel, St. Matthew deliberately goes out of his way to draw our 
attention to the number forty-two, arranging his list of Christ's 
ancestors to add up to it: "Therefore all the generations from 
Abraham to David are fourteen generations; and from David to 
the deportation to Babylon are fourteen generations; and from 
the deportation to Babylon to Christ are fourteen generations" 
(Matt. 1:17)4 -all adding up to forty-two, the number of waiting 
between promise and fulfillment, from bondage to redemption. 
But now, in the Revelation, the time has been shortened: The 
Church does not need to wait forty-two generations any longer, 
but only forty-two months. The message of these verses, there- 
fore, is that the Church will be saved through the coming Tribula- 
tion, during which Jerusalem is to be destroyed by an invasion of 
Gentiles. The end of this period will mean the full establishment 
of the Kingdom. The passage thus parallels the Olivet Discourse 
(Matt. 24, Mark 13, Luke 21), where Jesus prophesies the destruc- 
tion of Jerusalem, culminating in the Roman invasion of a.d.70. 5 



3. For example, Daniel was told: "From the time that the regular sacrifice is 
abolished, and the abomination of desolation is set up, there will be 1,290 
days. How blessed is he who keeps waiting and attains to the 1,335 days!" 
(Dan. 12:11-12). These numbers are based on the 430-year period of oppression 
in Egypt (Ex. 12:40) and the 45 years from bondage to the conquest of the 
Land (J osh. 14:6-10); the symbols indicate that the coming period of oppres- 
sion, compared to that in Egypt, will be brief (days as opposed to years), but 
three times as intense (3x 430= 1,290). Those who persevere in faith, however, 
will attain to the 1,335th day of victory and dominion. 

4. St. Matthew probably chose to divide the genealogy into three groups of 
fourteen to highlight the name of David, which has a numerical value of 14 in 
Hebrew. David is the central figure in Christ's genealogy, and Christ is pre- 
sented throughout Scripture as the greater David (cf. Acts 2:25-36). In order 
to arrive at this symmetrical arrangement, however, St. Matthew leaves out 
three generations between Joram and Uzziah in v. 8 (Ahaziah, Joash, and 
Amaziah; cf. 2 Kings 8:25;11:21;14:1), and counts Jeconiah twice in v. 11-12. 
Now, St. Matthew was not stupid: He could add figures correctly (he had been 
a tax collector!); moreover, he knew that the actual genealogies were available 
to his readers. But he wrote his Gospel to provide a Christology, not chronol- 
ogy. His list is written to expound the "forty-two-ness" of the period leading 
up to Christ's advent, and the "four teen-ness" of Christ Himself — all revealing 
the Savior as "the son of David, the son of Abraham" (1:1). 

5. Interestingly, the Roman siege of Jerusalem under Vespasian and Titus 
did last a literal three and a half years, from 67 to 70. But the main point of the 
term is its symbolic significance, which is based on its use in the prophets. As 
in many other cases, God obviously brought about the historical events in a 
way that harmonizes with the Biblical symbolism He authored. 

275 



11:3-4 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

3-4 But before Jerusalem is destroyed, St. John hears fur- 
ther testimony of its guilt, a summary of the apostate history of 
the City, focusing on its perennial persecution of the prophets. 
God tells St. John that He has ordained two Witnesses to proph- 
esy for twelve hundred and sixty days, the number of days in an 
idealized forty-t wo months (of thirty days each). This number, 
therefore, is related (but not identical) to the forty-two months, 
and continues to express the essential "forty-two-ness" of the 
period preceding the full establishment of the Kingdom. 6 The 
Witnesses are clothed in sackcloth, the traditional dress of the 
prophets from Elijah through John the Baptizer, symbolizing 
their mourning over national apostasy (2 Kings 1:8; Isa. 20:2; 
Jon. 3:6; Zech. 13:4; Matt. 3:4; Mark 1 :6). Biblical law required 
two witnesses (Num. 35:30; Deut. 17:6; 19:15; Matt. 18:16; cf. 
Ex. 7:15-25; 8-11; Luke 10:1); the idea is a pervasive theme 
throughout Biblical prophecy and symbolism. A preliminary 
conclusion about the two Witnesses, therefore, is that they rep- 
resent the line of prophets, culminating in John the Baptizer, who 
bore witness against Jerusalem during the history of Israel. 

The two Witnesses are identified as the two olive trees and 
the two lampstands that stand before the Lord of the earth. At 
this point the imagery becomes much more complex. St. John 
returns again to Zechariah's prophecy of the lampstand(Zech. 
4:1-5; cf. Rev. 1:4, 13, 20; 4:5). The seven lamps on the lamp- 
stand are connected to two olive trees (cf. Ps. 52:8; Jer. 11:16), 
from which flow an unceasing supply of oil, symbolizing the 
Holy Spirit's filling and empowering work in the leaders of His 
covenant people. The meaning of the symbol is summarized in 
Zechariah 4:6: "Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit, 
says the Lord of hosts." The same passage in Zechariah also 
speaks of two Witnesses, two sons of oil ("anointed ones"), who 
lead God's people: Joshua the priest and Zerubbabel the king 
(Zech. 3-4; cf. Ezra 3, 5-6; Hag. 1-2). In brief, then, Zechariah 
tells us of an olive tree/lampstand complex representing the offi- 
cers of the covenant: two Witness-figures who belong to the 
royal house and the priesthood. The Book of Revelation freely 
connects all of these, speaking of two shining lampstands which 



6. For some interesting aspects of the number 1,260 and its relationship to 
the number of the Beast (666), see comments on 13:18. 

276 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:5-6 

are two oil-filled olive trees, which are also two Witnesses, a 
king and a priest - all representing the Spirit-inspired prophetic 
testimony of the Kingdom of priests (Ex. 19:6). (A major aspect 
of St. John's message, as we have seen, is that the New Cove- 
nant Church comes into the full inheritance of the promises as 
the true Kingdom of priests, the royal priesthood in which "all 
the Lord's people are prophets.") That these Witnesses are 
members of the Old Covenant rather than the New is shown, 
among other indications, by their wearing of sackcloth - the 
dress characteristic of Old Covenant privation rather than New 
Covenant fullness. 

5-6 St. John now speaks of the two Witnesses in terms of 
the two great witnesses of the Old Testament, Moses and Elijah 
-the Law and the Prophets. If anyone desires to harm them, 
fire proceeds from their mouth and devours their enemies. In 
Numbers 16:35, fire came down from heaven at Moses' word 
and consumed the false worshipers who had rebelled against 
him; and, similarly, fire fell from heaven and consumed Elijah's 
enemies when he spoke the word (2 Ki. 1:9-12). This becomes a 
standard symbol for the power of the prophetic Word, as if fire 
actually proceeds from the mouths of God's Witnesses. As the 
Lord said to Jeremiah, "Behold, I am making My words in your 
mouth fire, and this people wood, and it shall consume them" 
(Jer. 5:14). 

Extending the imagery, St. John says that the Witnesses have 
the power to shut up the sky, in order that rain may not fall dur- 
ing the days of their prophesying, i.e., for the twelve hundred 
and sixty days (three and a half years) - the same duration of the 
drought caused by Elijah in 1 Kings 17 (see Luke 4:25; J ames 
5:17). Like Moses (Ex. 7-13), the Witnesses have power over the 
waters to turn them into blood, and to smite the earth with 
every plague, as often as they desire. 

Both of these prophetic figures pointed beyond themselves 
to the Greater Prophet, Jesus Christ. The very last message of 
the Old Testament mentions them together in a prophecy of 
Christ's Advent: "Remember the law of Moses My servant. . . . 
Behold, I am going to send you Elijah the prophet. . .." (Mai. 
4:4-5). Malachi goes on to declare that Elijah's ministry would 
be recapitulated in the life of John the Baptizer (Mai. 4:5-6; cf. 

277 



11:7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Matt. 11:14; 17:10-13; Luke 1:15-17). But John, like Elijah, was 
only a Forerunner, preparing the way for One coming after him, 
the Firstborn, who would have a double - nay, measureless - 
portion of the Spirit (cf. Deut. 21:17; 2 Kings 2:9; John 3:27-34). 

And, like Moses, John was succeeded by a Joshua, Jesus the Con- 
queror, who would bring the covenant people into their promised 
inheritance. The two Witnesses, therefore, summarize all the 
witnesses of the Old Covenant, culminating in the witness of John. 

7 Now the scene changes: The Witnesses are -to all appear- 
ances - defeated and destroyed. When they have finished their 
testimony, the Beast that comes up out of the Abyss will make 
war with them, and overcome and kill them. This is the first 
mention of the Beast in this book, but St. John certainly seems 
to expect his readers to understand his reference. Indeed, the 
Beast theme is a familiar one in Biblical history. In the beginning 
we are told of how Adam and Eve refused to become "gods" 
through submission to God, 7 and sought autonomous and ulti- 



7. The Christian doctrine of deification (cf. Ps. 82:6; John 10:34-36; Rem. 
8:29-30; Eph. 4:13, 24; Heb. 2:10-13;12:9-10; 2 Pet. 1:4; 1 John 3:2) is generally 
known in the Western churches by the terms sanctification and glorification, 
referring to man's full inheritance of the image of God. This doctrine (which 
has absolutely nothing in common with pagan realistic theories of the contin- 
uity of being, humanistic notions about man's "spark of divinity," or Mormon 
polytheistic fables regarding human evolution into godhood) is universal 
throughout the writings of the Church Fathers; see, e.g., Georgios I. Mantzar- 
idis, The Deification of Man: St. Gregory Palamas and the Orthodox Tradi- 
tion, Liadain Sherrard, trans. (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 
1984). St. Athanasius wrote: "The Word is not of things created, but rather is 
Himself their Creator. For therefore He assumed a created human body, that, 
having renewed it as its Creator, He might deify it in Himself, and thus bring 
us all into the Kingdom of heaven through our likeness to Him. For man 
would not have been deified if joined to a creature, or unless the Son were very 
God; nor would man have been brought into the Father's presence, unless He 
had been His natural and true Word who had put on the body. And as we 
would not have been delivered from sin and the curse, had not the flesh that 
the Word assumed been by nature human (for we should have had nothing in 
common with what is alien to us); so too humanity would not have been dei- 
fied, if the Word who became flesh had not been by nature derived from the 
Father and true and proper to Him. For therefore the union was of this kind, 
that He might unite what is man by nature to Him who naturally belonged to 
the Godhead, that his salvation and deification might be sure" (Orations 
Against the Arians, ii.70). He put it more succinctly in a famous statement 
from his classic work On the Incarnation of the Word of God (54): "The Word 
was made man in order that we might be made gods." 

278 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:7 

mate godhood instead. By submitting to a beast (the Serpent) 
they themselves became "beasts" instead of gods, with the 
Beast's mark of rebellion displayed on their foreheads (Gen. 
3:19); even in redemption they remained clothed with the skins 
of beasts (Gen. 3:21). 8 A later picture of the Fall is displayed in 
the fall of Nebuchadnezzar, who was, like Adam, "the king of 
kings, to whom the God of heaven has given the kingdom, the 
power, the strength, and the glory" (Dan. 2:37). Yet, through 
pride, through seeking autonomous godhood, he was judged: 
"And he was driven away from mankind and began eating grass 
like cattle, and his body was drenched with the dew of heaven, 
until his hair had grown like eagles' feathers and his nails like 
birds' claws" (Dan. 4:33). Man's rebellion against God is also 
imaged by the beasts' rebellion against man; thus the wicked 
persecutors of Christ at the crucifixion are called "dogs" and 
"bulls of Bashan," and are likened to "a ravening and roaring 
lion" (Ps. 22:12-13, 16). 

Another image of the "beastliness" of rebellion was contained 
in the Old Covenant sacrificial/dietary requirements against 
"unclean" animals, as James Jordan observes: "All unclean ani- 
mals resemble the serpent in three ways. They eat 'dirt' (rotting 
carrion, manure, garbage). They move in contact with 'dirt' 
(crawling on their bellies, fleshy pads of their feet in touch with 
the ground, no scales to keep their skin from contact with their 
watery environment). They revolt against human dominion, 
killing men or other beasts. Under the symbolism of the Old 
Covenant, such Satanic beasts represent the Satanic nations 
(Lev. 20:22-26), for animals are 'images' of men, 9 To eat Satanic 
animals, under the Old Covenant, was to 'eat' the Satanic life- 
style, to 'eat' death and rebellion." 10 

The enemy of God and the Church is thus always Beast, in 



8. Representing the restored image of God, the priests were clothed in veg- 
etables (linen) rather than in animals (wool); they were forbidden to wear the 
skins of beasts, because they produced sweat (Ezek. 44:17-18; cf. Gen. 3:19). 
On "judicial godhood" and the clothing of Adam and Eve with skins, see 
James B. Jordan, "Rebellion, Tyranny, and Dominion in the Book of 
Genesis," in Gary North, cd., Christianity and Civilization 3 (1983): Tactics of 
Christian Resistance, pp. 43-47. 

9.Cf. Prov. 6:6;26:11;30:15, 19, 24-31; Dan. 5:21; Ex. 13:2, 13. 
10. James B. Jordan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 
21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), p. 122. 

279 



11 :7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

its various historical manifestations. The prophets often spoke 
of pagan states as terrifying beasts that warred against the Cove- 
nant people (Ps. 87:4; 89:10; Isa. 51:9; Dan. 7:3-8, 16-25). All 
this will be gathered together in St. John's description of Rome 
and apostate Israel in Revelation 13. Yet we must remember that 
these persecuting powers were but the immediate manifestations 
of the agelong enemy of the Church — the Dragon, who is for- 
mally introduced in 12:3,11 but who was well-known to any Bib- 
lically literate person in St. John's audience. The Christians al- 
read y knew the ultimate identity of the Beast who arises from 
the Abyss. It is Leviathan, the Dragon, the Serpent of old, who 
comes out of his prison in the sea again and again to plague the 
people of God. The Abyss, the dark, raging Deep, is where 
Satan and his evil spirits are kept imprisoned except for periodic 
releases in order to torment men when they commit apostasy. I2 
(Note that the legion of evil spirits in the Gadarene demoniac 
pleaded to be kept out of the Abyss; with divine deception, 
Jesus sent them into the herd of swine, and the swine rushed 
headlong into the sea: Luke 8:31-33). The persecution of the 
Covenant people is never a merely "political" contest, regardless 
of how evil states attempt to color their wicked actions. It al- 
ways originates in the pit of hell. 

Throughout the history of redemption, the Beast made war 
against the Church, particularity against its prophetic witnesses. 
The final example of this in the Old Covenant period is the war 
of Herod against John the Forerunner, whom he overcame and 
killed (Mark 6:14-29); and the culmination of this war against 
the prophets was the murder of Christ, the final Prophet, of 
whom all the other prophets were images, and whose testimony 
they bore. Christ was crucified by the collaboration of Roman 
and Jewish authorities, and this partnership in persecution con- 
tinued throughout the history of the early Church (see Acts 
17:5-8; 1 Thess. 2:14-17). 13 



11. Closely related to the Biblical doctrine of the Beast is the Bible's "dino- 
saur theology"; for this, see my comments on 12:3. 

12. See above on 9:1-6. 

13. The Beast's attempt to erase the testimony of God's witnesses eventually 
led to its attack on the land of Israel, the birthplace of the Church; Titus sup- 
posed that he could destroy Christianity by destroying the Temple in a .d. 70 
(see on 17:14). The central religious motive behind the Roman war against the 
Jews was its deeply rooted hatred for the Christian Church. 

280 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:8-10 

8-10 The dead bodies of the Old Covenant Witnesses, "from 
righteous Abel to Zechariah" (Matt. 23:35) lie metaphorically in 
the street of the Great City which Spiritually [i.e., by the revela- 
tion of the Holy Spirit] is called Sodom and Egypt. This City is, 
of course, Jerusalem; St. John explains that it is where also their 
Lord was crucified (on Israel as Sodom, see Deut. 29:22-28; 
32:32; Isa. 1:10,21; 3:9; Jer. 23:14; Ezek. 16:46). Commentators 
are generally unable to find Bible references comparing Israel 
(or Jerusalem) to Egypt, but this is the old problem of not being 
able to see the forest for the trees. For the proof is contained in 
the whole message of the New Testament. Jesus is constantly re- 
garded as the new Moses (Acts 3:20-23; Heb. 3-4), the new 
Israel (Matt. 2:15), the new Temple (John 1:14; 2:19-21), and in 
fact a living recapitulation/transcendence of the entire history 
of the Exodus (cf. 1 Cor. 10: 1-4). 14 On the Mount of Transfigura- 
tion (Luke 9:31), He spoke with Moses and Elijah (another link 
with this passage), calling His coming death and resurrection in 
Jerusalem an "Exodus" (the Greek word is exodon). Following 
from all this is the language of Revelation itself, which speaks of 
the Egyptian plagues being poured out upon Israel (8:6-12; 
16:2-12). The war of the Witnesses with apostate Israel and the 
pagan states is described in the same terms as the original Ex- 
odus from Egypt (cf. also the Cloud and the pillar of fire in 
10: 1). Jerusalem, the once-holy, now apostate city, has become 
pagan and perverse, an oppressor of the true Covenant people, 
joining with the Beast in attacking and killing them. It is Jeru- 
salem that is guilty of the blood of the Old Covenant Witnesses; 
she is, par excellence, the killer of prophets (Matt. 21:33-43; 
23:34-38). In fact, said Jesus, "it cannot be that a prophet 
should perish outside of J erusalem" (Luke 13:33). 

With the death of the Witnesses, their voice of condemna- 
tion is silenced; and now those from the peoples and tribes and 
tongues and nations regard the Church itself as dead, openly 
displaying their contempt for God's people, whose dead bodies 
lie unburied in the street, under an apparent curse, for they will 



14. The evidence is far too extensive to repeat here, but see Meredith G. 
Kline, The Structure of Biblical Authority (Eerdmans, 2nd cd., 1975), pp. 
183-95; see also Robert D. Brinsmead, The Pattern of Redemptive History 
(Fallbrook, CA: Verdict Publications, 1979), PP . 23-33. 

281 



11:8-10 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

not permit their dead bodies to be laid in a tomb (cf. 1 Kings 
13:20-22; Jer. 8:1-2; 14:16; 16:3-4). The desire for insertion into 
the Promised Land in death was a central concern to the faithful 
Witnesses of the Old Covenant, as a pledge of their future resur- 
rection (Gen. 23; 47:29-31; 49:28-33; 50:1-14, 24-26; Ex. 13:19; 
Josh. 24:32; 1 Sam. 31:7-13; Acts 7:15-16; Heb. 11:22). The 
oppression of the Kingdom of priests by the heathen was often 
expressed in these terms: 

God, the nations have invaded Thine inheritance; 

They have defiled Thy holy Temple; 

They have laid Jerusalem in rains. 

They have given the dead bodies of Thy servants for food to the 

birds of the heavens, 
The flesh of Thy godly ones to the beasts of the earth. 
They have poured out their blood like water round about 

Jerusalem; 
And there was no one to bury them. (Ps. 79:1-3) 

The irony, however, is that it is now those who dwell on the 
Land - the Jews themselves (cf. 3:10) - who join with the 
heathen nations in oppressing the righteous. The apostates of 
Israel rejoice and make merry; and they will send gifts to one 
another, because these two prophets tormented those who dwell 
on the Land (cf. Herod's party, during which John was impris- 
oned and then beheaded: Matt. 14:3-12). The price of the 
world's peace was the annihilation of the prophetic Witness; 
Israel and the heathen world united in their evil gloating at the 
destruction of the prophets, whose faithful double witness had 
tormented the disobedient with conviction of sin, driving them 
to commit murder (cf. Gen. 4:3-8; 1 John 3:11-12; Acts 7:54-60). 
Natural enemies were reconciled to each other through their 
joint participation in the murder of the prophets. This was espe- 
cially true in their murder of Christ: "Now Herod and Pilate 
became friends with one another that very day; for before they 
had been at enmity with each other" (Luke 23:12). At Christ's 
death all manner of people rejoiced and mocked: the rulers, the 
priests, the competing religious factions, the Roman soldiers, 
the servants, the criminals; all joined in celebrating His death 
(cf. Matt. 27:27-31, 39-44; Mark 15:29-32; Luke 22:63-65; 
23:8-12, 35-39); all sided with the Beast against the Lamb (John 

282 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:8-11-12 

19:15). The attempt to destroy the Witnesses seemed to be suc- 
cessful, not only in silencing individual prophets, but in abolish- 
ing the Testimony of the Covenant itself. The progressive war 
against the Word reached its climax with the murder of Christ; 
this was the ultimate crime that brought on Jerusalem's destruc- 
tion. Moses had instructed the people of Israel about the com- 
ing Prophet, warning them that they would be cursed if they re- 
fused to listen to Him (Deut. 18:15-19); the martyr Stephen 
quoted this prophecy (Acts 7:37), and concluded: 

You men who are stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart 
and ears are always resisting the Holy Spirit; you are doing just 
as your fathers did. Which one of the prophets did your fathers 
not persecute? And they killed those who had previously an- 
nounced the coming of the Righteous One, whose betrayers and 
murderers you have now become! (Acts 7:51-52) 

For now, the persecutors are victorious, and rejoice for three 
and a half days. This is no more a literal period than the previ- 
ous figures of 42 months and 1,260 days. As we have noted, 
"three and a half represents a broken seven, a period of sad- 
ness and oppression. In each section of Revelation, St. John's 
figures harmonize with each other: The Seal-judgments are in 
fourths, the Trumpet-judgments are in thirds, and the numbers 
in chapters 11-13 correspond to three and a half (42 months and 
1,260 days both equal three and a half years). St. John's poetic 
symmetry continues this symbolism: The days during which the 
righteous are oppressed, their bodies abused, are a three-and-a- 
half, a time of grief when the wicked are triumphant. Yet the 
evil time is brief, being limited to a mere three and a half days. 
Thus several lines of imagery converge here; and St. John has 
kept the period in general agreement with the three days of 
Christ's descent into hell. In His death, the entire Covenant 
community and its Testimony lie dead in the streets of Jeru- 
salem, under the Curse. 

11-12 After the three and a half days, the Witnesses are res- 
urrected: The breath of life from God entered into them in the 
New Creation (cf. Gen. 2:7;Ezek. 37:1-14; John 20:22) and they 
stood on their feet (cf. Acts 7:55), causing terror and consterna- 
tion to their enemies. Great fear came upon those who were 

283 



11:13-14 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

beholding them (cf. Acts 2:43; 5:5; 19:17; contrast John 7:13; 
12:42; 19:38; 20:19), and with good reason: Through the resur- 
rection of Christ, the Church and her Testimony became un- 
stoppable. In union with Christ in His Ascension to glory (Eph. 
2:6), they went up to heaven in the Cloud, and their enemies 
beheld them. 15 The Witnesses did not survive the persecutions; 
they died. But in Christ's resurrection they rose to power and 
dominion that existed not by might, nor by power, but by God's 
Spirit, the very breath of life from God. "We are not the lords of 
history and do not control its outcome, but we have assurance 
that there is a lord of history' and he controls its outcome. We 
need a theological interpretation of disaster, one that recognizes 
that God acts in such events as captivities, defeats, and crucifix- 
ions. The Bible can be interpreted as a string of God's triumphs 
disguised as disasters." 16 

St. J ohn draws an important parallel here that should not be 
missed, for it is close to the heart of the passage's meaning. The 
ascension of the Witnesses is described in the same language as 
that of St. J ohn's own ascension: 

4:1 After these things I looked, and behold, a door standing 
open in heaven, and the first Voice which I had heard, like a 
trumpet speaking with me, saying: Come up here. . . . 

11:11-12 And after the three and a half days . . . they heard a 
loud Voice from heaven saying to them: Come up here. . . . 

The story of the Two Witnesses is therefore the story of the 
witnessing Church, which has received the divine command to 
Come up here and has ascended with Christ into the Cloud of 
heaven, to the Throne (Eph. 1:20-22; 2:6; Heb. 12:22-24): She 
now possesses an imperial grant to exercise rule over the ends of 
the earth, discipline the nations to the obedience of faith (Matt. 
28:18-20; Rem. 1:5). 

13-14 One of the results of Christ's ascension, as He fore- 
told, would be the crack of doom for apostate Israel, the shak- 



15. This bears some similarity to Elijah's experience, with the major differ- 
ence that it was his friend, and not his enemies, who saw his ascension (2 Kings 
2:9-14). 

16. Herbert Schlossberg,/c?0&/or Destruction: Christian Faith and Its 
Confrontation with American Society (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 
1983), p. 304. 

284 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:13-14 

ing of heaven and earth. Scripture connects as one theological 
Event - the Advent - Christ's birth, life, death, resurrection, as- 
cension, the outpouring of His Spirit upon the Church in A.D. 
30, and the outpouring of His wrath upon Israel in the Holo- 
caust of A.D. 66-70: Thus in that Day there was a great earth- 
quake (cf. Rev. 6:12; Ezek. 38:19-20; Hag. 2:6-7; Zech. 14:5; 
Matt. 27:51-53; Heb. 12:26-28). Because the triumph of Christ 
meant the defeat of His enemies, a tenth of the City fell. Actu- 
ally, the whole City of Jerusalem fell in a.d. 70; but, as we have 
seen, the Trumpet-judgments do not yet reach the final end of 
J erusalem, but (apparently) go only as far as the first siege of 
Jerusalem, under Cestius. In conformity to the nature of the 
Trumpet as an alarm, God's taking a 'tithe" of Jerusalem in the 
first siege was a warning to the City. 

For clearly symbolic, Biblical-theological reasons, St. J ohn 
tells us that seven thousand people were killed in the earth- 
quake. Ultimately, the Earth-and-Heavenquake brought by the 
New Covenant killed many more than seven thousand. But the 
number represents the exact reverse of the situation in Elijah's 
day. In 1 Kings 19:18, God told Elijah that 7,000 in Israel re- 
mained faithful to the covenant. Even then, it was most likely a 
symbolic number, indicating completeness (seven) multiplied by 
many (one thousand). In other words, Elijah should not be dis- 
couraged, for he was not alone. God's righteous elect were num- 
erous, and the whole number was present and accounted for. On 
the other hand, however, they were in the minority. But now, in 
the New Covenant, the situation is reversed. The latter-day Eli- 
jahs, the faithful witnesses in the Church, are not to be dis- 
mayed when it seems as if God is destroying all Israel, and the 
faithful are few in number. For this time it is the apostates, the 
Baal-worshipers, who are the "seven thousand in Israel." The 
tables have been turned. In the Old Testament, only "7000" 
faithful existed; in the New Testament, only "7000" are wicked. 
They are destroyed, and the rest - the overwhelming majority 
— are converted and saved: The rest were terrified and gave 
glory to the God of heaven - Biblical language for conversion 
and belief (cf. J osh. 7:19; Isa. 26:9; 42:12; J er. 13:16; Matt. 5:16; 
Luke 17:15-19; 18:43; 1 Pet. 2:12; Rev. 14:7; 15:4; 16:9; 19:7; 
21:24). The tendency in the New Covenant age is judgment unto 
salvation. 

285 



11:15 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

St. John closes the section of the Sixth Trumpet with these 
words: The Second Woe is past; behold, the Third Woe is com- 
ing quickly. St. John does not tell us explicitly when the Third 
Woe arrives. Since the First and Second Woes refer to the warn- 
ings Israel received in the full-scale demonic attack on the Land 
(9:1-12) and in the first Roman invasion under Cestius (9:13-21), 
it is possible to take the Third Woe as the Fall of Jerusalem it- 
self; six Woes (in three pairs) are listed in rapid succession in 
18:10, 16, 19. It is more in keeping with St. John's literary struc- 
turing, however, to see the Third Woe as a consequence of the 
Seventh Trumpet (just as the First and Second Woes correspond 
to the Fifth and Sixth Trumpets: cf. 8:13; 9:12); the Woe is de- 
clared in 12:12, after Michael's defeat of the Dragon, and con- 
tinues through the end of Chapter 14, showing the Dragon's 
"great wrath" during his "short time" of dominance. 

The Seventh Trumpet (11:15-19) 

15 And the seventh angel sounded; and there arose loud voices 
in heaven, saying, 

The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of 
our Lord, and of His Christ; and He will reign forever 
and ever. 

16 And the twenty-four elders, who sit on their thrones before 
God, fell on their faces and worshiped God, 

17 saying, 

We give Thee thanks, O Lord God, the Almighty, who 
art and who wast, because Thou hast taken Thy great 
power and hast begun to reign. 

18 And the nations were enraged, and Thy rage came, 
and the time came for the dead to be vindicated, and 
the time to give their reward to Thy servants the 
prophets and to the saints and to those who fear Thy 
name, the small and the great, and to destroy those 
who destroy the Land. 

19 And the Temple of God in heaven was opened; and the ark 
of His covenant appeared in His Temple, and there were 
flashes of lightning and sounds and peals of thunder and an 
earthquake and a great hailstorm. 

15 In conformity with the Biblical pattern uniting the ideas 
of sabbath and consummation, the Trumpet of the seventh angel 
announces that "the Mystery of God" has been fulfilled and ac- 
complished (cf. 10:6-7). At this point in history God's plan is 

286 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:15 

made apparent: He has placed Jews and Gentiles on equal foot- 
ing in the Covenant. The destruction of apostate Israel and the 
Temple revealed that God had created a new nation, a new Tem- 
ple, as J esus had prophesied to the J ewish leaders: 'Therefore I 
say to you, the Kingdom of God will be taken away from you, 
and be given to a nation producing the fruit of it" (Matt. 21:43). 
Later, J esus told his disciples what would be the effect of the de- 
struction of J erusalem: "At that time will appear the sign of the 
Son of Man in heaven" (Matt. 24:30). Marcellus Kik explains: 
'The judgment upon J erusalem was the sign of the fact that the 
Son of man was reigning in heaven. There has been misunder- 
standing due to the reading of this verse, as some have thought 
it to be 'a sign in heaven.' But this is not what the verse says; it 
says the sign of the Son of Man in heaven. The phrase 'in 
heaven' defines the locality of the Son of Man and not of the 
sign. A sign was not to appear in the heavens, but the destruc- 
tion of Jerusalem was to indicate the rule of the Son of Man in 
heaven." 17 

Kik continues: 'The apostle Paul states in the eleventh chap- 
ter of Remans that the fall of the J ews was a blessing to the rest 
of the world. He speaks of it as the enriching of the Gentiles and 
the reconciling of the world. The catastrophe of J erusalem 
really signalized the beginning of a new and world-wide king- 
dom, marking the full separation of the Christian Church from 
legalistic J udaism. The whole system of worship, so closely as- 
sociated with J erusalem and the Temple, received, as it were, a 
death blow from God himself. God was now through with the 
Old Covenant made at Sinai: holding full sway was the sign of 
the New Covenant."] 8 

Thus the Kingdom of God, the "Fifth Kingdom" prophesied 
in Daniel 2, becomes universalized, as the heavenly choir sings: 
The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our 
Lord, and of His Christ; and He will reign forever and ever. The 



17. Marcellus Kik, An Eschatology of Victory {Nuiley, NJ: The Presbyter- 
ian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1971), p. 137. The common rendering in 
modern versions of the Bible ("then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in 
the sky") simply reflects the unbiblical biases of a few translators and editors. 
The more literal translation in the King James Version is what the Greek text 
says. Cf. the discussion in Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 97-105. 

18. Ibid., p. 138. 

287 



11:15 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

final dissociation of Christianity from Judaism means that it is 
now a worldwide religion. The Kingdom of Christ now begins 
the process of encompassing and enveloping all kingdoms of the 
world. The earth will be regenerated. This became clear with the 
fall of Jerusalem, the sign that Christ had indeed ascended to 
His heavenly throne and was ruling the nations, pouring out 
wrath and tribulation upon His enemies at the request of His 
praying Church. The Roman armies who annihilated J erusalem, 
massacring and enslaving its inhabitants, were His armies (Dan. 
9:26), fulfilling His Word (Deut. 28:49-68). 

In terms of the Biblical calendar, the "seventh trumpet" was 
sounded on Tishri 1, the first day of the seventh month in the li- 
turgical year, and of the first month in the civil year: Rosh Hash- 
anah, the Day of Trumpets. Ernest L. Martin has pointed out a 
number of interesting aspects of the Day of Trumpets that bear 
directly on the significance of the Seventh Trumpet in Revela- 
tion: "Before the period of the Exodus in the time of Moses, this 
was the day which apparently began the biblical year. It also 
looks like this was the day when many people were advanced 
one year of life - no matter at what month of the year they were 
actually born. Notice that the patriarch Noah became 601 years 
of age 'in the first month [Tishri], the first day of the month 
[later to be called the Day of Trumpets]' (Gen. 8:13). That was 
the very day when 'Noah removed the covering of the ark, and 
looked, and, behold, the face of the ground was dry' (v. 13). 
This was not only Noah's official birthday, it became a new birth 
for the earth as well. . . . Even the first day of creation men- 
tioned in Genesis 1:1-5 could be reckoned to this very day. . . . 
Since the Autumn apparently commenced all biblical years be- 
fore the Exodus, and since all the fruit was on the trees ready for 
Adam and Eve to eat (Gen. 1:29; 2:9, 16-17), it suggests that . . . 
the first day of creation mentioned in Genesis was also the first 
of Tishri (at least Moses no doubt intended to give that impres- 
sion). This means that not only the birthday of the new earth in 
Noah's day was what later became the Day of Trumpets, but it 
was also the day which ushered in the original creation of the 
earth. 

". . . . The majority opinion of J ewish elders (which still 
dominates the services of the synagogues) was that the Day of 
Trumpets was the memorial day that commemorated the begin- 

288 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:15 

ning of the world. Authorized opinion prevailed that the first of 
Tishri was the first day of Genesis 1:1-5. It 'came to be regarded 
as the birthday of the world' (M'ClintOCk & Strong, Cyclo- 
paedia,vo\. x, p. 568). It was even more than an anniversary of 
the physical creation. 'Judaism regards New Year's Day not 
merely as an anniversary of creation, but — more importantly — 
as a renewal of it. This is when the world is reborn' (Theodor H. 
Gaster, Festivals of the Jewish Year, p. 109). . . . 

"Each of the Jewish months was officially introduced by the 
blowing of trumpets (Num. 10:10). Since the festival year (in 
which all the Mosaic festivals were found) was seven months 
long, the last month (Tishri) was the last month for a trumpet 
introduction. This is one of the reasons that the day was called 
'the Day of trumpets.' The 'last trump' in the series was always 
sounded on this day - so, it was the final trumpets' day (Lev. 
23:24; Num. 29:1). 

'This was the exact day that many of the ancient kings and 
rulers of J udah reckoned as their inauguration day of rule . . . 
indeed, it was customary that the final ceremony in the corona- 
tion of kings was the blowing of trumpets. For Solomon: 'Blow 
ye the trumpet, and say, God save king Solomon' (1 Kings 1:34). 
For Jehu: They blew with the trumpets, saying, J ehu is king' 

(2 Kings 9:13). At the enthronement of Jehoash: 'The people of 
the land rejoiced, and blew with trumpets' (2 Kings 11:14). " I9 

M. D. Goulder summarizes the significance of Rosh Hash- 
anah: "New Year is the Jewish equivalent of the Christian Ad- 
vent: it combines joy at the thought of the ultimate coming of 
God's reign with penitence at the thought of the judgment which 
that reign will bring. It is marked by the blowing of the Shofar 
(Lev.23:24), to proclaim the day (keryxate, J oel 2:15); and by 
three proper benedictions, the Malkuyot, the Zikronot, and the 
Shofarot. Each of these comprises ten verses from Scripture: 
the first on the kingship of God, looking forward to his ultimate 
reign (e.g. Zech. 14:9); the second on God's remembering of 
men's deeds to judge or reward, and his remembering of his cov- 
enant; the third on the blowing of the Shofar, from Sinai to the 
last trumpet which shall gather the dispersion to Jerusalem." 20 



19. Ernest L. Martin, The Birth of Christ Recalculated (Pasadena: Founda- 
tion for Biblical Research, second cd., 1980), pp. 155ff. 

20. M. D. Goulder, The Evangelists' Calendar: A Lectionary Explanation 
of the Development of Scripture (London: SPCK, 1978), pp. 245f. 

289 



11:16-18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

All this would naturally be in the minds of St. John and his 
first-century audience at the mention of the great Seventh Trum- 
pet. Now, he adds a new dimension of symbolism, by showing 
the Christian significance of Rosh Hashanah, that to which it 
had always pointed: The Day of Trumpets is the Beginning of 
the New World, the New Creation, the coronation-day of the 
King of kings, when He is enthroned as supreme Judge over the 
whole world. In fact, as we will see in Chapter 12, the signifi- 
cance of Tishri 1 is regarded by St. John - theologically, if not 
"actually" — as the birthday of Jesus Christ. For now, however, 
he presents it as the Birthday of the New Creation, the fruit of 
the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ and His saints. 

16-18 The choral declaration of Christ's universal Lordship 
and the worldwide triumph of His kingdom is joined by the 
twenty-four elders, who sit on their thrones before God. (Note 
the architectural reference: The characteristic posture of the 
teacher/ruler in the New Testament is enthronement; J esus 
stood up to read the Scriptures, and sat down to teach, Luke 
4:16, 20.) These elders fell on their faces and worshiped God, 
saying: We give Thee thanks, O Lord God, the Almighty. The 
verb for give thanks is eucharisteo, used throughout Christian 
history for the Communion of the Lord's Body and Blood: The 
Eucharist. This term acquires its technical meaning very early 
(cf. Didache 9-10), based on its usage in the New Testament ac- 
counts of the Lord's Supper (Matt. 26:26-27; Mark 14:22-23; Luke 
22:17, 19; 1 Cor. 11:24). We would be blind indeed not to see it 
here. For St. J ohn has shown us that the pattern of God's re- 
demptive action in history is the same as that acted out on every 
Lord's Day: The Church, having died and resurrected in Christ 
(v. 7-11), ascends amid cosmic judgments to heaven at the divine 
command (v. 12-14). Surrounded by the heavenly host singing 
praises (v. 15), the Elders fall down before God's majesty, pro- 
claiming: Eucharistoutnen! We give Thanks! (v. 16-17). 

The Elders continue the service with a confession of faith, 
praising the 'Lord for the inauguration of His Kingdom: Thou 
hast taken Thy great power and hast begun to reign. It was 
Christ the Lord who was stirring up the nations of the Roman 
Empire to do battle against Israel, for Israel had persecuted and 
slaughtered His saints. Thus the nations were enraged, and Thy 

290 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:19 

rage came, and apostate, persecuting Jerusalem suffers the 
brunt of both; and the time came for the dead to be vindicated, 
and the time to give their reward to Thy servants the prophets 
and to the saints and to those who fear Thy name, the small and 
the great. This is just a rephrasing of Christ's statement to Jeru- 
salem in His last public discourse: "That upon you may fall all 
the righteous blood shed on the earth, from the blood of right- 
eous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, 
whom you murdered between the Temple and the altar. Truly I 
say to you, all these things will come upon this generation" 
(Matt. 23:35-36). God's servants the prophets (equivalent terms 
in Revelation: see 1:1; 10:7; 16:6; 18:24; 19:2, 10; cf. Dan. 9:6, 10; 
Amos 3:7; Zech. 1:6) would be vindicated and rewarded in the 
coming judgment - not the final judgment at the Last Day, but 
rather the historical vindication and avenging of the martyred 
saints, those who had suffered at the hands of ungodly Israel, as 
Jesus had foretold. 21 Just prior to the fall of Israel, the Apostle 
Paul had written of the Jews, who were constantly persecuting 
the Christians, that "wrath has come upon them to the utmost" 
(1 Thess. 2:16). Now, St. John's glimpse into the near future 
shows that as God's pent-up rage fell in all its fury, the Church 
rejoiced. Echoing the familiar theme of expulsion from Eden, 
the song closes with the observation that the destruction of 
Israel served to destroy those who destroy the Land (cf. Lev. 
18:24-30). 

19 Here is summed up the theological significance of the fall 
of Israel: It meant that the Temple of God in heaven was opened 
(Matt. 27:51; Eph. 2:19-22; Heb. 8:1-6; 9:8). The earthly Temple 
is gone, and now only the true Temple remains. God's Temple is 
revealed to be the Church; and now the ark of His covenant ap- 
peared in His Temple, as God's indwelling presence is mani- 
fested there (Eph. 2:22). Technically, a "saint" is someone who 
has access to the sanctuary, someone with sanctuary privileges. 
In the New Covenant, we are all saints; we all have access to the 
Throne (Heb. 4:16; 10:19-25), having ascended in Christ (defin- 



21. The word judgment, when used of God's people, generally signifies vin- 
dication and vengeance on their behalf (see 1 Sam. 24:15; 2 Sam. 18:19, 3 1 ; Ps. 
10:18; 26:1; 43:1; Isa. 1:17; Heb. 10:30-39). 

291 



11:19 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

itively in His Ascension, progressively each Lord's Day in wor- 
ship). In the Old Covenant, the Ten Commandments were "hid- 
den" in the Sanctuary, and no one was allowed in (although 
God's revelation was published provisionally by Moses). But 
now, in the New Covenant, the Mystery has been openly pub- 
lished, and man in Christ has access. With the sounding of the 
Seventh Trumpet the revelation is complete and definitive; the 
Mystery is no longer mysterious. St. Paul commended the saints 
of Rome "to Him who is able to establish you according to my 
Gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the reve- 
lation of the Mystery which has been kept secret for long ages 
past, but now is manifested, and by the Scriptures of the proph- 
ets, according to the commandment of the eternal God, has 
been made known to all the nations, leading to obedience of 
faith" (Rem. 16:25-26). 

For this reason all the meteorological phenomena that had 
been associated with the Cloud in the Old Covenant revelation 
(cf. Ps. 1 8) are now spoken of by St. John in relation to the 
Church: There were flashes of lightning and voices and peals of 
thunder and an earthquake and a great hailstorm. In the Church 
of Jesus Christ the door of heaven has opened up to us. Our 
sanctification is by means of the Church, through its ministry 
and sacraments, as St. Irenaeus wrote: "We receive our faith 
from the Church and keep it safe; and it is as it were a precious 
deposit stored in a fine vessel, ever renewing its vitality through 
the Spirit of God, and causing the renewal of the vessel in which 
it is stored. For this gift of God has been entrusted to the 
Church, as the breath of life to created man, to the end that all 
members by receiving it should be made alive. And herein has 
been bestowed upon us our means of communion with Christ, 
namely the Holy Spirit, the pledge of immortality, the strength- 
ening of our faith, the ladder by which we ascend to God. For 
the Apostle says, 'God has set up in the Church Apostles, 
prophets, teachers' [1 Cor. 12:28] and all the other means of the 
Spirit's working. But they have no share in this Spirit who do 
not join in the activity of the Church. . . . For w-here the 
Church is, there is the Spirit of God; and where the Spirit of 
God is, there is the Church and every kind of grace. The Spirit is 
truth. Therefore those who have no share in the Spirit are not 
nourished and given life at their mother's breast; nor do they en- 

292 



THE END OF THE BEGINNING 11:19 

joy the sparkling fountain that issues from the body of Christ ," 22 
The early Christians who first read the Book of Revelation, 
especially those of a Jewish background, had to understand that 
the destruction of Jerusalem would not mean the end of cove- 
nant or Kingdom. The fall of old Israel was not "the beginning 
of the end." Instead, it was the sign that Christ's worldwide 
Kingdom had truly begun, that their Lord was ruling the nations 
from His heavenly throne, and that the eventual conquest of all 
nations by the armies of Christ was assured. For these humble, 
suffering believers, the promised age of the Messiah's rule had 
arrived. And what they were about to witness in the fall of Israel 
was the end of the Beginning. 



22. St. Irenaeus, Against H eresies, iii.xxiv.l; translation by Henry Betten- 
son, ed., The Early Christian Fathers (Oxford: Oxford Universit y Press, 1956, 
1969), p. 83. 



293 



12 

THE HOLY WAR 



The Book of Revelation, we have noted, is organized in 
terms of the five-part treaty structure of the Biblical covenant. 
Chapter 12 falls into the fourth main series of visions 
(Trumpets), proclaiming God's judgment on the false king and 
the false prophet (chapters 8-14). But Chapter 12 also marks the 
intersection of this fivefold structure with another overarching 
pattern of the book: the theme of the Bridegroom and the 
Bride. Chapters 1-11 deal with the victory of Christ over His ene- 
mies, culminating in the glorious establishment of the Church as 
His holy Temple. Chapters 12-22 deal with the victory of the 
Church over her enemies, ending with her glorious establish- 
ment as God's holy Temple. Thus the second half of the Book of 
Revelation covers much the same ground as the first, but from a 
different perspective. Milton S. Terry comments: "Part First has 
revealed the Lamb of God under various symbols, glorious in 
power, opening the book of divine mysteries, avenging the mar- 
t yred saints, and exhibiting the fearful judgments destined to 
come upon the enemies of God. Everything is viewed as from 
the throne of the King of heaven, who sends forth his armies 
and destroys the defiant murderers of his prophets and burns up 
their city (comp. Matt. 22:7). 

"Part Second reveals the Church in conflict with infernal and 
worldly principalities and powers, surviving all persecution, and 
triumphing by the word of her testimony, and, after Babylon 
the harlot falls and passes from view, appearing as the wife of 
the Lamb, the tabernacle of God with men, glorious in her 
beauty and imperishable as the throne of God." > 



1. Milton S. Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics: A Study of the Most Notable Rev- 
elations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton & 
Mains, 1896), p. 381. 

295 



PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Thus, although there is a progressive development toward a 
climax in the second half of Revelation, we will also see both a 
repetition of familiar concepts and a diversity in portraying 
them, a device often used by the Biblical prophets (see examples 
of this in Gen. 37:5-11; 41:18-25, 32; Dan. 2, 7). "The great red 
Dragon (12:3) is not to be regarded as different from the angel of 
the abyss (9:11). The hundred and forty-four thousand on 
Mount Zion (14:1) are the same as the sealed Israelites of 7:4-8. 
The seven last plagues (chaps. 15 and 16) correspond noticeably 
to the seven trumpets of doom. 'Babylon the Great' is the same 
as the great city where the Lord was crucified (11:8), and the new 
Jerusalem, filled with the glory of God and the Lamb, is but 
another symbol of the temple of God in the heaven (11: 19). "2 

This point in the prophecy, therefore, is something of a new 
beginning; and to show the conflict between Satan and the 
Church, St. John goes back to the beginning, to the birth of 
Christ and to Satan's unsuccessful attempts to destroy Him, 
ending with Christ's victorious ascent into heaven. This sets the 
stage for, and reveals the origin and meaning of, Satan's perse- 
cution of the Christian Church throughout the world. The 
struggle will be fierce and bloody; but Satan is already doomed, 
for Christ is reigning from His heavenly throne, and His people 
are destined for complete victory on the basis of His work and 
through their own faithful and fearless proclamation of the 
Gospel. 

The Serpent and the Seed of the Woman (12:1-6) 

1 And a great sign appeared in heaven: a Woman clothed with 
the sun, and the moon under her feet, and on her head a 
crown of twelve stars; 

2 and being with child she cried out, being in labor and in pain 
to give birth. 

3 And another sign appeared in heaven: and behold, a great 
red Dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and on his 
heads were seven diadems. 

4 And his tail sweeps away a third of the stars of heaven, and 
threw them to the Land. And the Dragon stood before the 
Woman who was about to give birth, so that when she gave 
birth he might devour her Child. 

2. Ibid. 

296 



THE HOLY WAR 12:1-2 

5 And she gave birth to a Son, a male, who is to rule all na- 
tions with a rod of iron; and her Child was caught up to God 
and to His Throne. 

6 And the Woman fled into the wilderness where she has a 
place prepared by God, so that there they may nourish her 
for one thousand two hundred and sixty days. 

1-2 St. John alerts us from the outset that we must give care- 
ful attention to the subject of this vision, for the symbol of the 
Woman here is a great sign. 3 "Literalists" would have it that the 
use of this term implies that "most of Revelation is to be taken 
literally." 4 But this is to miss the point. St. John is not saying 
that this passage, in contrast to the rest of the book, is a "sign," 
for he has already told us that the entire book is composed of 
"signs" (1: 1). The point here is that this is a great sign, an impor- 
tant symbol, central to the interpretation of the prophecy as a 
whole. St. J ohn is telling his readers to think carefully about the 
Biblical meaning of the sign. 

This central symbol is a Woman, 5 a familiar Biblical image 
for the Church, the people of God. (Specifically, as we shall see, 
the Woman here stands for the Church in the form of Old Cove- 
nant Israel.) St. J ohn's first readers would immediately have 
thought of previous prophetic uses of the Woman as represent- 
ing the Church (see, e.g., Isa. 26; 49-50; 54; 66; J er. 3-4; Lam. 1; 
Ezek. 16; Hos. 1-4; Mic. 4). Some of the prophetic passages 
about the Woman-Church are not particularly complimentary, 
for Israel had often descended into adultery with heathen gods. 
But the symbol in Revelation 12 is a glorious vision of the 
Church in her purity, as the wife of God: She is, in the image of 
her Husband (Ps. 104:2; Rev. 1:16; 10:1), clothed (the same word 
as in 10: 1) with the sun (cf. Isa. 60:1-2). The moon under her feet 
and her crown of twelve stars enhance the picture of glory and 



3. The word sign is used seven times in chapters 12-19; three are in heaven 
(21:1,3; 15:1), four are on earth (13:13, 14; 16:14;19:20). 

4. H enry M. M orris, The Revelation Record: A Scientific and Devotional 
Commentary on the Book of Revelation (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publish- 
ers, Inc., 1983), p. 213. 

5. The word woman (or women) is used 19 times in Revelation, prompting 
Ford to suggest that "the woman symbol is almost as important as the Lamb" 
(Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and Commentary [Garden City: Dou- 
bleday and Company, 1975]), p. 188. 

297 



12:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

dominion-indeed, of her ascent from glory to glory (1 Cor. 
15:41; 2 Cor. 3:18). Solomon proclaims that the Bride is "lovely 
as Jerusalem, terrible as an army with banners" (Cant. 6:4); she 

looks forth like the dawn, 
Beautiful as the full moon, 
Resplendent as the sun, 
Terrible as an army with banners. (Cant. 6:10) 

This Woman, St. John says, is the Mother of Christ: She is 
seen to be with child (the same Greek expression used of the Vir- 
gin Mary in Matthew 1:18, 23), carrying in her womb the Mes- 
siah who is destined "to rule all the nations with a rod of iron" 
(v. 5). The image of the Woman/Mother has its origins all the 
way back to the Garden of Eden and the protevangelium - the 
first proclamation of the Gospel, in which God revealed that 
through the Woman would come the Redeemer to crush the Ser- 
pent's head (Gen. 3:15). The picture then becomes a regular 
motif in the historical outworking of God's purposes with 
Israel. One familiar example occurs in the story of Jael and Sis- 
era, which tells how the enemy of God's people is destroyed, his 
head shattered, by a woman (Jud.4:9, 17-22; 5:24-27; cf. the 
death of Abimelech in J ud. 9:53). This is also a major theme in 
the story of Esther and her deliverance of Israel. The definitive 
fulfillment of this prophecy took place in the Virgin Birth, as 
Mary clearly recognized: 

He has done mighty deeds with His arm; 

He has scattered those who were proud in the thoughts of their heart. 

He has brought down rulers from their thrones, 

And has exalted those who were humble. 

He has filled the hungry with good things; 

And sent away the rich empty-handed. 

He has given help to Israel His servant, 

In remembrance of His mercy, 

As He spoke to our fathers, 

To Abraham and his seed forever. (Luke 1:51-55) 

Isaiah's prophecy of the Virgin Mother is the specific Biblical 
background for St. J ohn's vision of the Woman, as Philip Car- 
rington explains: "The actual words are drawn not from any 

298 



THE HOLY WAR 12:1-2 

heathen myth, but from the prophet Isaiah, Moreover the LORD 
spake again unto Ahaz, saying, Ask thee a Sign of the LORD thy 
God; ask it either in the Depth, or in the Height above (7:10-11); 
or, to translate it into Johannine language, either in the Ab yss or 
in Heaven. In Isaiah the language appears to be purely a rhetori- 
cal flourish; but it is obviously the origin of St. John's Sign in 
Heaven. 

"This is made perfectly clear by what follows in Isaiah. The 
king refuses to ask for the Sign, and Isaiah replies, The Lord 
himself shall give you a Sign; Behold, a Virgin shall conceive, 
and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel [7:14]. The 
words of St. J ohn are simply a quotation from the earlier 
prophet: There appeared a great Sign in the Sky, a Woman . . . 
with child, and she cried in her pain and was in torment to be 
delivered. More than this, St. John has given us a much closer 
translation of the Hebrew than our Authorized Version, which 
is influenced by the Septuagint; the Greek translation does, in- 
deed, say, A Virgin shall conceive, but the original Hebrew only 
says, A Woman is with Child, and St. J ohn has given it to us ex- 
actly. And, what is more, the words Crying in her pain and was 
in torment come from Isaiah also (26:17). 

"St. J ohn is therefore announcing the birth of the male 
child, the warrior king, foretold by . . . Isaiah." 6 

St. J ohn thus brings together all the Woman-imagery of the 
Bible for this composite portrait of the covenant community, 
laboring to bring forth the Messiah: She is Eve, the Mother of 
all living, whose Seed will crush the Dragon's head; she is also 
Sarah, Rebekah, Rachel, J ochebed, Hannah, and the other 
women of the covenant who gave birth to deliverers, forerun- 
ners of the Seed; she is the Virgin Mary, through whom the 
promises to the fathers met their fulfillment. But this great 
cosmic figure cannot simply be identified with any one of these 
women; rather, each of them individually embodied and por- 
trayed before the world a different facet of the Woman's mean- 
ing, imaging the labors of the Church to give birth to the Mes- 
siah: 



6. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), pp. 204f. 

299 



12:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

As the pregnant woman approaches the time to give birth, 
She writhes and cries out in her labor pains, 
Thus were we before Thee, O Lord. (Isa. 26:17) 

As prophetic revelation progresses in Scripture, it becomes 
increasingly clear that the Old Covenant Church is laboring to 
bring forth the Christ (cf. Mic. 4:9-5:9): He was the basic prom- 
ise of the Abrahamic covenant. This is what Israel was waiting 
for, being in labor and pain throughout her existence. This is the 
most essential meaning of Israel's history, apart from which it 
has no significance: the bearing of the Manchild (cf. John 
16:20-22), the Savior of the world. From the protevangeliumto 
the Flood, from the Abrahamic Covenant through the slavery in 
Egypt, the Exodus, the settling of Canaan, the Babylonian Cap- 
tivity, the return from exile, and the suffering under the Greeks 
and the Remans, Israel was laboring to give birth to the Christ, 
to bring in the Messianic age. 

In the midst of the Church's struggles, therefore, she cried 
out. This verb (krazo) has special significance in Scripture, gen- 
erally being used for an oath or the solemn proclamation of 
God's revelation; it is often used of God's servants speaking in 
the face of opposition. 7 Here it has reference to the Church's 
official declaration of the Word of God, the prophecy that she 
uttered as she travailed in birth. This was the essence of all pro- 
phetic revelation, to bear witness to the Christ (John 5:39, 
45-46; Luke 24:25-27; Acts 3:24; 13:27). 

It is important to recognize the relationship of all this to the 
very obvious astronomical symbolism in the text. The word St. 
John uses for sign was the term used in the ancient world to 
describe the constellations of the Zodiac; St. John's model for 
this vision of the Church is the constellation of Virgo, which 
does have a "crown" of twelve stars. 8 It seems likely that the 



7. See, e.g., Matt. 27:50; Mark 3:11; 5:7; 9:24; 10:48; 15:13; John 1:15; 7:28; 
12:13,44; Acts 19:28,32, 34; Rem. 9:27; Gal. 4:6; James 5:4; and see its use 
especially in Revelation: 6:10; 7:2, 10; 10:3; 14:15; 18:2,18-19; 19:17, 

8. The twelve stars are: "(1) Pi, (2) Nu, (3) Beta (near the ecliptic), (4) Sigma, 
(5) Chi, (6) Iota - these six stars form the southern hemisphere around the head 
of Virgo. Then there are (7) Theta, (8) Star 60, (9) Delta, (10) Star 93, (1 1) Beta 
(the second magnitude star), (12) Omicron - these last six form the northern 
hemisphere around the head of Virgo. All these stars are visible ones that could 
have been seen by observers." Ernest L. Martin, The Birth of Christ Recalcu- 
lated (Pasadena, CA: Foundation for Biblical Research, 2nd cd., 1980), p. 159. 

300 



THE HOLY WAR 12:1-2 

twelve stars also represent the twelve signs of the Zodiac, from 
ancient times regarded as symbols of the twelve tribes of Israel; 
in J oseph's famous dream his father, mother, and the twelve 
tribes were symbolized by the sun, the moon, and twelve stars or 
constellations (Gen. 37:9). 9 We have already seen how the divine 
arrangement of Israel's tribes around the Tabernacle (Num.2) 
corresponded to the zodiacal order of the constellations. 10 The 
Seventh Trumpet of 11:15 brought us to Rosh Hashanah: the 
Day of Trumpets, the first day of the seventh month, the first 
day of the new year, the Day of the enthronement of the King of 
kings in the New Creation. The statement that Virgo is "crowned" 
with the twelve constellations, therefore, "means that she is the 
one among the twelve who reigns at the time," i.e. during the 
seventh month, just as "the Scorpion's claws seem about to 
catch the Virgin." n In terms of astral symbolism, therefore, the 
birth of the Messiah takes place on the Day of Trumpets. 

It is interesting that by pursuing several lines of very con- 
vincing evidence, Prof. Ernest Martin carefully and painstak- 
ingly narrows down the probable date of Christ's birth to 
sometime in September, 3 b.c. 12 Martin then adds the icing to 
the cake: "In the period of Christ's birth, the Sun entered the 
head-position of the Woman about August 13, and exited from 
her feet about October 2. But the Apostle J ohn saw the scene 
when the Sun 'clothes' or 'adorns' the Woman. This surely indi- 
cates that the position of the Sun in the vision was located some- 
where mid-bodied of the Woman — between the neck and knees. 
(The Sun could hardly be said to 'clothe' the Woman if it were 
situated in her face or near her feet.) 

'The only time in the year that the Sun could be in a position 
to 'clothe' this celestial Woman (to be mid-bodied) is when it was 



9. See Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, iii.vii.7, where he explains the 
twelve stones in the high priest's breastplate, representing the twelve tribes of 
Israel (Ex. 28:17-21), in terms of the Zodiac. 

10. See comments on Revelation 4:7; cf. Ernest L. Martin, The Birth of 
Christ Recalculated, pp. 168f. 

11. F arrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the Claren- 
don Press, 1964), p. 141. 

12. It is generally held that Herod the Great died in 4 b. c, and therefore 
that Christ was born in 6 or 7 b x . Martin, however, presents a detailed and 
persuasive case for Herod's death occurring in 1 B.C. See his Birth of Christ 
Recalculated, pp. 26-131. 

301 



12:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

located between about 150 and 170 degrees along the ecliptic. 
This 'clothing' of the Woman by the Sun occurs for a 20-day 
period each year. This 20-degree spread could indicate the 
general time when Christ was born. In 3 b.c, the Sun would 
have entered this celestial region about August 27 and exited 
from it about September 15. If J ohn in the Book of Revelation is 
associating the birth of Christ with the period when the Sun is 
mid-bodied to the Woman, then Christ would have had to be 
born within that 20-day period. From the point of view of the 
Magi (who were astrologers), this would have been the only log- 
ical sign under which the Jewish Messiah might be born — espe- 
cially if he were to be born of a virgin. Even today, astrologers 
recognize that the sign of Virgo is the one which has reference to 
a messianic world ruler to be born of a virgin. . . . 

"But there is a way to arrive at a much closer time for 
Christ's birth than a simple 20-day period. The position of the 
Moon in John's vision could pinpoint the nativity to within a day 
- perhaps to an hour period or less. This may seem absurd, but 
it is entirely possible. 

"The key is the Moon. The apostle said it was located 'under 
her feet.' What does the word 'under' signify in this case? Does it 
mean the Woman of the vision was standing on the Moon when 
John observed it or does it mean her feet were positioned slightly 
above the Moon? John does not tell us. This, however, is not of 
major consequence in using the Moon to answer our question 
because it would only involve the difference of a degree or two. 
Since the feet of Virgo the Virgin represent the last 7 degrees of 
the constellation (in the time of Christ this would have been be- 
tween about 180 and 187 degrees along the ecliptic), the Moon 
has to be positioned somewhere under that 7-degree arc. But the 
Moon also has to be in that exact location when the Sun is mid- 
bodied to Virgo. In the year 3 b.c, these two factors came to 
precise agreement for less than two hours, as observed from 
Palestine or Patmos, on September 11. The relationship began 
about 6:15 p.m . (sunset), and lasted until around 7:45 p.m. 
(moonset). This is the only day in the whole year that this could 
have taken place." 13 



13. Ibid., pp. 146f. What about December 25, the traditional date of the 
Nativity? As Martin demonstrates, there were numerous startling astronom- 

302 



THE HOLY WAR 12:3 

An added bonus: Sundown on September 11,3 b.c, was the 
beginning of Tishri 1 in the Jewish calendar - Rosh Hashanah, 
the Day of Trumpets! 14 Martin summarizes: "The central theme 
of the Day of Trumpets is clearly that of enthronement of the 
great King of kings. This was the general understanding of the 
day in early Judaism - and it certainly is that of the New Testa- 
ment. In Revelation 11:15 the seventh angel sounds his 'last 
trump' and the kingdoms of this world become those of Christ. 
This happens at a time when a woman is seen in heaven with 
twelve stars around her head and the Sun mid-bodied to her, 
with the Moon under her feet. This is clearly a New Moon scene 
for the Day of Trumpets." 15 

3 St. John sees another sign ... in heaven: a great red 
Dragon. As he explains in v. 9, the Dragon is none other than 
"the Serpent of old who is called the devil and Satan," the enemy 
of God and His people. St. John reveals him as the power be- 
hind the imperial thrones of the ancient world that persecuted 
the Church; for, like the four Beast-empires of Daniel's proph- 
ecy, the Dragon has seven heads and ten horns: Daniel's beasts 
possessed seven heads among them (the third beast having 
four), and the fourth beast had ten horns (Dan. 7:3-7). Baby- 
lon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome were all stages in the 
Dragon's attempt to establish his illicit empire over the world. 
(The significance of the seven heads is thus not simply that the 
Dragon is hard to kill, but rather that he is identified with the 
terrible beasts of Daniel's vision; cf. the "heads" of the Dragon 
in Ps. 74:13 -15.) He was the great Beast, of which they had been 
only partial images. It was he who had been the agelong enemy 
of the people of God. In all Israel's struggles against Beasts, 

ical phenomena taking place during the years 3-2 B.C. Chief among these 
celestial events was the fact that Jupiter, recognized by Jews and Gentiles alike 
as the "Planet of the Messiah," was located in Virgo's womb and standing still, 
directly over Bethlehem, on December 25, 2 b. c, when the Child was a little 
over a year old. (Matthew states that the holy family was settled in a house, 
not in a stable, by the time the Magi visited [Matt. 2:11]. Moreover, Herod 
ordered the slaughter of the innocents "from two years old and under, accord- 
ing to the time which he had ascertained from the Magi" [Matt. 2:16], in- 
dicating that the Child was no longer a newborn.) For a full account of the as- 
tronomical events of 3-2 B.C., see Martin, pp. 4-25, 144-77. 

14. Ibid., pp. 152ff. 

15. Ibid., p. 158. 

303 



12:3 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

through all the attempts by human empires to destroy the Seed 
of the Covenant, the Dragon had been their foe. He wore the 
diadems of the persecuting empires. 

Why is the devil portrayed as a Dragon? In order to under- 
stand this, we must consider the Biblical theology of dinosaurs, 
which is surprisingly very detailed. While the Bible does speak 
of land dinosaurs (cf. behemoth in Job 40: 15-24), 16 our focus 
here will be on dragons and sea serpents (cf. Job 7:12; 41:1-34). 17 
Essentially, as part of God's good creation (see Gen. 1:21: sea 
monsters), there is nothing "evil" about these creatures (Gen. 
1:31; Ps. 148:7); but, because of the Fall, they are used in Scrip- 
ture to symbolize rebellious man at the height of his power and 
glory. 

Three kinds of dragons are spoken of in Scripture: Tannin 
(Dragon; Ps. 91:13), Leviathan (Ps. 104:26), and Rahab (Job 
26:12-13). 18 The Bible relates each of these monsters to the Ser- 
pent, who stands for the subtle, deceitful enemy of God's people 
(Gen. 3:1-5, 13-15). Thus, to demonstrate the divine victory and 
dominion over man's rebellion, God turned Moses' rod into a 
"serpent" (Ex. 4:1-4), and Aaron's rod into a "dragon" (tannin; 
Ex. 7:8-12). The Dragon/Serpent, therefore, becomes in Scrip- 
ture a symbol of Satanically inspired, rebellious pagan culture 
(cf. Jer. 51:34), especially exemplified by Egypt in its war against 
the Covenant people. This is particularly true with regard to the 
monster Rahab (meaning the proud one), which is often as yn- 
onym for Egypt (Ps. 87:4; 89:10; Isa. 30:7). God's Covenant- 
making deliverance of His people in the Exodus is described in 
terms of both the original creation and God's triumph over the 
Dragon: 



16. Some mistakenly suppose this to be a hippopotamus. Its description in 
the Biblical text indicates that it was much closer to a brontosaurus. 

17. The creature mentioned in the latter reference, a huge, fire-breathing 
dragon called Leviathan, is actually thought by some to be a crocodile! It is 
clear from the statements in Job, however, that at least some great dinosaurs 
were contemporaries of this early patriarch. For a sober-minded examination 
of supposed sightings of sea monsters in more recent times, see Bernard Heu- 
velmans, In the Wake of the Sea-Serpents (New York: Hill and Wang, 1968). 
Duane T. Gish has proposed a possible explanation for the biology of "breath- 
ing fire" in his Dinosaurs: Those Terrible Lizards (San Diego: Creation-Life 
Publishers, 1977), pp. 50ff. 

18. In Hebrew, this is a completely different word from the name of Rahab, 
the Canaanite harlot who saved the Hebrew spies in Joshua 2. 

304 



THE HOLY WAR 12:3 

Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of the Lord; 

Awake as in the days of old, the generations of long ago. 

Was it not Thou who cut Rahab in pieces, 

Who pierced the Dragon? 

Was it not Thou who dried up the sea, 

The waters of the great deep; 

Who made the depths of the sea a pathway 

For the redeemed to cross over? (Isa. 51:9-10) 

The Bible also speaks of the Exodus as a salvation from 
Leviathan: 

Thou didst divide the sea by Thy strength; 

Thou didst break the heads of the Dragons in the waters. 

Thou didst crush the heads of Leviathan; 

Thou didst give him as food for the creatures of the wilderness. 

(Ps. 74:13-14) 

Thus, in provisional fulfillment of the promise in Eden, the 
Dragon's head was crushed when God saved His people from 
Egypt. Of course, the head-wound became healed, and the 
Dragon (accompanied by the Dragon-State in his image) kept 
coming back to plague and persecute the Seed of the woman. 
This happens again and again throughout the Old Testament, 
which records numerous provisional head-crushings of the 
Dragon (Judg. 4:21; 5:26-27; 9:50-57; 1 Sam. 5:1-5; 17:49-51; 2 
Sam. 18:9; 20:21-22; Ps. 68:21; Hab. 3:13). In terms of this, the 
prophets looked forward to the coming definitive defeat of the 
Dragon in the work of Christ. Isaiah saw Israel as a pregnant 
woman, writhing and crying out in her labor pains, waiting for 
the Deliverer to be born (Isa. 26:17-21); the next verse reads: 

In that Day the Lord will punish Leviathan the fleeing Serpent 

With His fierce and great and mighty sword, 

Even Leviathan the twisted Serpent; 

And He will kill the Dragon who lives in the sea. 

(Isa. 27:1) 

Daniel repeats the same idea in what might be called his 
"commentary" on Moses' account of creation in Genesis 1. Writ- 
ing of the fifth and sixth days of creation, Moses had said that 

305 



12:4 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

God created 19 the "sea monsters" (tannin) in the sea, and "cattle" 
(behemoth) on the earth (Gen. 1 :20-25); but these were succeeded 
by Man, who, as the image of God, was created for dominion 
over the creatures (Gen. 1:26-28). Daniel 7 symbolically expands 
on this idea by showing us a series of Beasts - the mighty and 
terrible world powers that exercised ungodly dominion over the 
earth (v. 1-8). But Daniel sees that their reign is only "for an 
appointed period of time" (v. 12); and, as he keeps looking, the 
night visions end with the Ancient of Days giving over world do- 
minion to the Son of Man, the Second Adam - "an everlasting 
dominion which will not pass away" (v. 13-14), for He is the last 
Work of God. 

4 The Dragon's tail sweeps away a third of the stars of 
heaven. St. John is capitalizing on the fact that the Scorpion, 
with which the Dragon/Serpent is associated, 20 "has a third of 
the (zodiacal) stars at his tail, for four out of the twelve signs 
come after him." 21 What of the statement that he threw them to 
the Land? That, as Farrer justly remarks, "is theology, not 
astronomy. "2 2 St. John has already associated stars with angels, 
a familiar Biblical connection (see comments on 1:20); now he 
symbolically describes the fall of Satan and the evil angels, an 
event related in more direct language in 2 Peter 2:4, Jude 6, and 
St. John's own commentary on his allegory in verse 9. The 
Dragon's "stars" are the fallen angels, who joined him in rebel- 
lion. 

Why does the Dragon sweep away a third of the angels? First, 
this is the form in which the Trumpet-judgments are cast (cf. 
8:7-12; 9:15, 18). Christ is the Firstborn; the two-thirds portion 
(cf. Deut. 21:17) is reserved for Him and His Kingdom. Second, 
the Biblical principle of the two witnesses may also be involved 
(St. John uses some courtroom language in this chapter): For 
every false witness Satan can muster against the covenant, God 
has two angels on His side; the evil report is more than nullified 
by the testimony God and his angels can give. 



19. The Hebrew word here is bara, used otherwise only of the creation of 
the heavens and the earth, v. 1, and of man, v. 27. 

20. Cf. Deut. 8: 15; Luke 10:19; 11:11-12; Rev. 9:3-11. 

21. Farrer, p. 143. 

22. Ibid. 

306 



THE HOLY WAR 12:4 

The Dragon's goal is to abort the work of Christ, to devour 
and kill Him. So the Dragon stood (cf. Gen. 3:14) before the 
woman in order to devour her Child, to kill Christ as soon as He 
was born. Again St. J ohn is using astronomy for allegorical pur- 
poses; for, as we have seen, it is just as the sun is "clothing" 
Virgo that the Scorpion's claws seem about to catch her; 23 in- 
deed, he seems poised to pounce upon her Child as soon as He is 
born. This conflict between Christ and Satan was announced in 
Genesis 3:15, the war between the two seeds, the Seed of the 
Woman and the seed of the Serpent. From the first book of the 
Bible to the last, this is the basic warfare of history. The Dragon 
is at war with the Woman and her Seed, primarily J esus Christ. 
All throughout history Satan was trying either to keep Christ 
from being born, or to kill Him as soon as He was born. This is 
why Cain killed Abel, under the inspiration of the Dragon: The 
attack on Abel was an attempt to destroy the Seed. It was un- 
successful, for Eve then gave birth to Seth, the Appointed One, 
"in place of Abel" (Gen. 4:25), and the Seed was preserved in 
him. Satan's next tactic was to corrupt the line of Seth; thus, 
within ten generations from Adam, virtually all Seth's descen- 
dants apostatized through intermarriage with the heathen (Gen. 
6:1-12), and the whole earth was corrupted except for one right- 
eous man and his family. Satan's mad rage to attack the Seed 
was so great that the entire world was destroyed, yet still he failed. 
The Seed was preserved within a single family in the Ark. 

The Dragon again tried to murder the Seed in his attacks on 
the family of Abraham. On two occasions Satan attempted to 
have Sarah raped by a heathen king (Gen. 12:10-20; 20:1-18); he 
tried again with Rebekah (Gen. 26:1-11). The Draconic enmity 
against the Seed is manifest also in the enmity of Esau against 
J acob, a struggle between the two seeds that began in the womb 
(Gen. 25:22-23). We can also see Satan's attempts to obstruct 
the Seed in Isaac's sinful plan to cheat Jacob out of his divinely 
appointed inheritance (Gen. 27). Again, when the children of 
Israel were in Egypt, the Dragon tried to destroy the Seed by 
having all the male children killed (Ex. 1). Five hundred years 



23. The constellation Libra (the Scales) was also regarded in the ancient 
world as the Claws of Scorpio; see Richard Hinckley Allen, Star Names: Their 
Lore and Meaning (New York: Dover Publications, 1963), pp. 269ff. 

307 



12:5 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

later, the Seed was being carried in a shepherd-boy, and again 
the Dragon attacked, twice inspiring a demon-possessed king to 
throw javelins at him (1 Sam. 18:10-11). In fact, the whole 
machinery of Saul's kingdom went into effect just to try to kill 
David (1 Sam. 18-27). Similarly, the wicked Queen Athaliah 
"destroyed all the seed royal of the House of Judah" (2 Chron. 
22: 10), yet the Seed was preserved in the infant Joash. Haman, 
the evil Prime Minister of Persia, would have succeeded in his 
attempt to launch a full-scale pogrom to destroy all the Jews, 
had it not been for the courage and wisdom of Queen Esther 
(Est. 3-9). The most striking example of this pattern on a large 
scale occurs throughout the history of Israel, from the Exodus 
to the Exile: the covenant people's perennial, consistent tempta- 
tion to murder their own children, to offer them up as sacrifices 
to demons (Lev. 18:21; 2 Ki. 16:3; 2 Chron. 28:3; Ps. 106:37-38; 
Ezek. 16:20). Why? It was the war of the two seeds. The Dragon 
was trying to destroy the Christ. 

This pattern comes to a dramatic climax at the birth of 
Christ, when the Dragon possesses King Herod, the Edomite 
ruler of Judea, and inspires him to slaughter the children of 
Bethlehem (Matt. 2:13-18); indeed, St. John's vision of the 
Woman, the Child, and the Dragon seems almost an allegory of 
that event. The Dragon tried again, of course: tempting the 
Lord (Luke 4:1-13), seeking to have Him murdered (Luke 
4:28-29), subjecting Him to human and demonic oppression 
throughout His ministry, possessing one of the most trusted dis- 
ciples to betray Him (John 13:2, 27), and finally orchestrating 
His crucifixion. Even then - rather, especially then - the Dragon 
was defeated, for the Cross was God's way of tricking Satan 
into fulfilling His purposes, according to His wisdom — "the hid- 
den wisdom," St. Paul says, "which God predestined before the 
ages to our glory, the wisdom which none of the rulers of this 
age has understood; for if they had understood it, they would 
not have crucified the Lord of glory" (1 Cor. 2:7-8). In wounding 
the Seed's heel, the Serpent's head was crushed. 

5 And she gave birth to a Son, a male (cf. Isa. 66:7-8) who is 
to rule all nations with a rod of iron. St. John returns to Psalm 
2, one of his favorite texts, to explain his symbolism. The Son 
is, obviously, Jesus Christ, the Seed of the Woman, the Child of 

308 



THE HOLY WAR 12:6 

the Virgin, born of Israel to rule the nations. In this verse St. 
John telescopes the entire history of Christ's earthly ministry, 
stating (as if it had happened all at once) that her Child was 
caught up to God and to His Throne. It is as if Christ's Incarna- 
tion had led directly to His Ascension to the Throne of glory. 
St. John's point is not to belittle the atonement and the resurrec- 
tion, but to stress that the Lord's Anointed completely escapes 
the power of the Dragon; and we should note that St. John's 
order follows that of the Psalm. Telling of His exaltation to the 
heavenly Throne, the Christ says: 

I will surely tell of the decree of the Lord: 

He said to Me, 'Thou art My Son, 

Today / have begotten Thee. 24 

Ask of Me, and I will surely give the nations as Thine inheritance, 

And the very ends of the earth as Thy possession. 

Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron, 

Thou shalt shatter them like earthenware." (Ps. 2:7-9) 

"The Psalm makes Messiah's heavenly birth all one with his 
enthronement; if he is fathered by God, he reigns." 25 In spite of 
everything that the Dragon does, the Seed is caught up to the 
Throne and now rules the nations with a rod of iron, just as if 
He had gone straight from the Incarnation to the Throne; Satan 
had no power to stop Him. The Ascension was the goal of Christ's 
Advent. 

6 And the Woman fled into the wilderness where she has a 
place prepared by God. As will become apparent below, the 
Woman's flight into the wilderness is a picture of the flight of the 
Judean Christians from the destruction of Jerusalem, so that the 
Dragon's wrath is expended upon apostate rather than faithful 
Israel. While she is in the wilderness, the Woman is nourished 
for twelve hundred and sixty days, 26 a period equivalent to the 
"time, times, and half a time" (3 Vi years) of verse 14, and sym- 



24. Some will argue that this phrase refers not to the incarnation or physical 
birth of Christ, but to His eternal generation instead; for John's purposes of 
Biblical allusion, however, that question is beside the point. His emphasis is, 
with the Psalmist, that the Child goes from birth to reign. 

25. Farrer, p. 141. 

26. For the relationship of the 1,260 days to the number of the Beast (666), 
see comments on 13:18. 

309 



12:6 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

bolically related to the 42 months/1,260 days of 11:2-3 and 13:5. 
We saw on 11:2 that the Scriptures use this terminology to speak 
of a limited period of ascendant, triumphant wickedness, a per- 
iod of wrath and judgment due to apostasy from the Covenant. 
During this time, therefore, when Satan seems to be dominant, 
the Church is protected. The Woman's flight into the wilderness 
calls up associations with Elijah's wilderness sojourn during the 
three and a half years of drought, when he was miraculously fed 
by ravens (1 Kings 17:3-6); similarly, St. John says, the Woman's 
flight does not signify God's abandonment of her but rather His 
loving provision. The faithful Bride has a place prepared by 
God (cf. 2 Sam. 7:10; 1 Chron. 17:9; John 14:2-3). He gives His 
messengers charge concerning her (Ps. 91:11-13) and sends her 
into the wilderness so that there they may nourish her. St. John 
also means for us to think, as we will see below, of Israel's flight 
into the wilderness from the face of the Egyptian Dragon; and 
of the flight of the Virgin Mary into Egypt from the murderous 
wrath of King Herod (Matt. 2:13-21). 

War in Heaven (12:7-12) 

7 And there was war in heaven, Michael and His angels wag- 
ing war with the Dragon. And the Dragon and his angels 
waged war, 

8 and they were not strong enough, and there was no longer a 
place found for them in heaven. 

9 And the great Dragon was thrown down, the Serpent of old 
who is called the devil and Satan, who deceives the whole 
world; he was thrown down to the Land, and his angels were 
thrown down with him. 

10 And I heard a loud Voice in heaven, saying: Now have come 
the salvation, and the power, and the Kingdom of our God, 
and the authority of His Christ, for he has been thrown 
down - the accuser of our brethren, who accused them be- 
fore our God day and night. 

1 1 And they conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by 
the word of their testimony, and they did not love their life 
even to death. 

12 For this reason, rejoice, heavens and you who tabernacle 
in them. Woe to the Land and the Sea, because the devil has 
come down to you, having great wrath, knowing that he has 
only a short time. 

310 



THE HOLY WAR 12:7-9 

7-9 The scene changes abruptly: St. John now sees war in 
heaven, Michael and His angels waging war with the Dragon. 
This is not, as some suppose, a sequel to the preceding vision, as 
if Satan, frustrated in his attempt to devour the Messiah, now 
directs his assault toward heaven. On the contrary, St. John un- 
veils this scene in order to explain the preceding verse — to show 
why the Woman had to flee into the wilderness. Once that is 
explained, in verses 7-12, he returns to the theme of the flight of 
the Woman. In addition, St. John uses the imagery in this pas- 
sage to display another aspect of the Child's conflict with the 
Dragon. Chronologically, this explanatory section fits in be- 
tween verses 5 and 6. 

We should note to begin with that the Holy War is initiated, 
not by the Dragon, but by Michael and His angels. There should 
be little question that this Captain of the angelic host is a symbol 
for the Seed of the Woman, the Son of God - represented now 
not as a Child, but as Michael, the great Warrior-Protector who 
leads the armies of heaven in battle against the demons. St. 
John's symbolism is not casual; it is intentional, and very pre- 
cise. He carefully chose to reveal Christ in terms of the specific 
Biblical connotations associated with Michael. 

The name Michael (meaning Who is like God?) occurs else- 
where in the Scriptures only in Daniel and Jude. Michael is por- 
trayed in Daniel as "the great Prince" who stands as the special 
Protector of the people of God. War breaks out in heaven be- 
tween the good and evil angels, and even Gabriel is unable to 
overcome the demons until Michael comes to do battle with the 
enemy (Dan. 10:12-13, 20-21). In view of what is revealed about 
Michael in the latter part of Daniel 10, it is likely that the other- 
wise unexplained vision in the first part of the chapter refers to 
Him as well: Daniel saw a man 

dressed in linen, whose waist was girded with a belt of pure gold 
of Uphaz. His body also was like beryl, His face like lightning, 
His eyes were like flaming torches, His arms and feet like the 
gleam of polished bronze, and the sound of His words like the 
sound of a tumult. (Dan. 10:5-6) 

The closing passage of Daniel's prophecy refers to Michael 
as the Guardian over God's people, who will arise to fight on 

311 



12:7-9 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

their behalf during a time of great tribulation, saving all whose 
names are written in the Book of Life (Dan. 12:1). 27 Michael's 
name does not appear again in the Bible until an offhanded 
mention by Jude, who tells us that He "disputed with the devil 
and argued about the Body of Moses" (Jude 9). 28 Jude also calls 
Him The Archangel, a term which - contrary to some specula- 
tions that have developed about the various ranks of angels - 
does not necessarily mean "member of a superior class of 
angels," but rather simply "the Chief of the angels," an expres- 
sion equivalent to "Captain of the Lord's hosts" (Josh. 5:13-15). 
This would also tend to identify Michael with the Angel of the 
Lord (cf. Ex. 23:20-23), a figure who is, in most cases, a pre- 
incarnate appearance of Christ. 29 The only other Biblical occur- 
rence of the word Archangel is in 1 Thessalonians 4:16, where 
Christ descends in the Second Coming "with a shout, with the 
voice of the Archangel," or, better, "with a shout, with Arch- 
angelic Voice." The clear implication is that Christ Himself 
shouts with the Archangelic Voice. 30 (The fact that there are 
superior ranks of angels [cf. Rem. 8:38; Eph. 1:21; COL 1:16] 
means that a more general use of the term archangel is theolog- 
ically valid. But the Bible itself does not seem to use it in this 
way.) Barrington observes that the term Archangel "may even 
be compared with 'Lord of hosts,' and it may perhaps have 
meant that manifestation of God in which He appears as leader 
of the armies of Israel or of the heavens." 31 Accordingly, in the 
Book of Revelation we find Him leading the armies of heaven in 
victorious conflict with Satan, actions clearly predicated of 
Christ throughout the New Testament (cf. Matt. 12:22-29; Luke 
11:14-22; Col. 2:15; Heb. 2:14-15; 1 John 3:8; Rev. 19:11-16). 
Even at first glance, therefore, there is much to commend 



27. Calvin recognized that this description of Michael must be a reference 
to Jesus Christ; see his Commentaries on the Book of the Prophet Daniel 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1979), Vol. 2, pp. 369ff. 

28. By "Body of Moses" Jude probably means the Old Testament Covenant 
community, the equivalent of the "Body of Christ": cf. the "houses" of Moses 
and Christ in Heb. 3:2-6. 

29. See the discussion of this point in Herman Bavinck, The Doctrine of 
God, translated by William Hendriksen (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans 
Publishing Co., 1951), pp. 256ff. 

30. A most helpful discussion of this whole issue is in Barrington, pp. 
218-24. See also E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John (Cherry Hill, 
NJ: Mack Publishing Co., [1851] 1972), Vol. 1, pp. 464-72. 

31. Barrington, p. 222. 

312 



THE HOLY WAR 12:7-9 

the view that Michael is a symbolic representation of Christ, a 
name that emphasizes His divine nature and power; and that the 
"angels" who accompany Him are His apostles, "together with 
all the angelic forces in sympathy and cooperation with them." 32 
This view both explains, and is reinforced by, the; passage as a 
whole. As Philip Barrington argues, "It makes sense of the 
chapter. Of course if you want the book to be a Chinese puzzle, 
this will not weigh with you; but if you think that the author (or 
even the final editor) of the book intended this chapter to have a 
meaning, then you will think it reasonable to consider an inter- 
pretation of it which removes confusion. A Woman who is pic- 
tured as the Bride of the Lord bears a Son; she is the new Eve, 
and therefore her son is to crush the Serpent; she is the Virgin of 
Isaiah, and therefore he is a warrior-king. There follows a war 
with the Serpent, in which an opponent casts him out of heaven; 
the Serpent then went off to make war with the rest of the seed 
of the woman. Clearly, then, the person he had first fought with 
was also the seed of the woman. Why drag in anyone else? 

"The battle royal is followed by a choric song out of heaven, 
and, as we have seen, the function of these choric songs is to 
make clear the main action which is depicted in symbols. It says, 
Now is come Salvation and Power and the Kingdom of our God 
and the Authority of His Messiah, and then (going on to think 
of the followers of Christ rather than Christ himself), They con- 
quered him through the Blood of the Lamb and the Word of His 
Witness. Now this admittedly means that it is the Christ whose 
power has come, and that it is through his blood that victory has 
been obtained. It tells us who conquered Satan and how; it was 
Jesus on the cross." 33 

We have already noted that the Holy War was initiated by 
the attack of Michael and the army of heaven. In response, the 
Dragon and his angels waged war. But this defensive action by 
the forces of evil proved an utter failure: They were not strong 
enough, and there was no longer a place found for them in 
heaven. And the great Dragon was thrown down, in abject 
defeat. For the forces of evil, the battle is lost. This is exactly 
what Jesus prophesied about the prospects for His Church Mili- 
tant: "The gates of hell shall not prevail against it" (Matt. 16:18). 



32. Terry, p. 386. 

33. Barrington, p. 219. 



313 



12:7-9 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Jesus pictures the Church, not as a city under siege by the forces 
of evil, but rather as a great army, besieging the capital city and 
headquarters of the enemy; and it is the forces of evil that suc- 
cumb to the onslaught of the Church. The people of God are the 
aggressors: They take the initiative in the warfare, and are suc- 
cessful in their assault on the gates of hell. Satan and all his 
forces are not strong enough, while the Christian can say with 
St. Paul, I am strong enough for everything, in Him who 
strengthens me (Phil. 4:13). 

St. John interjects detailed information about the Dragon's 
identity: He is the Serpent of old, the ancient Tempter who 
seduced Eve in the beginning (Gen. 3:1-15). The Dragon is 
known as the devil, a term meaning The Slanderer, for he is, as 
the Lord said, "a liar, and the father of the lie" (John 8:44). A 
related term for the Dragon is Satan (or, more properly, the 
satan), the Hebrew word for an adversary, especially in legal 
matters. The being whom we call Satan is the attorney for the 
prosecution, the Accuser who brings up legal charges against 
men in God's court, the evil one who tirelessly accuses the breth- 
ren "day and night" (v. 10). Satan was the accuser of Job (Job 
1:6-11; 2:1-5) and of Joshua the high priest (Zech. 3:1-10) - and, 
as can be seen from both of those cases, his supposedly legal ac- 
cusations are mere lies. The Accuser of God's people is a slan- 
derer, the Father of the Lie. 34 Because he is the Liar par excel- 
lence, he deceives the whole world. It was Satan who was behind 
the slanderous accusations against the early Christians, the scur- 
rilous rumors and criminal charges alleging that they were 
apostates, atheists, ritual murderers, cannibals, social revolu- 
tionaries, and haters of mankind. 35 

But, St. John says, the great Dragon was thrown down to 
the Land, and his angels were thrown down with him. Three 
times the expression thrown down is used in verse 9, emphasiz- 
ing the significance and finality of this event. The principle of lex 
talionis (an eye for an eye) is put into force here: In 12:4 the 



34. On the essential character of Satan as a slanderous "accuser of the 
brethren," see Greg Bahnsen, "The Person, Work, and Present Status of 
Satan," in The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, Vol. I, No. 2 (Winter, 
1974). 

35. Cf. Robert L. Wilken, The Christians as the Remans Saw Them (New 
Haven: Yale University Press, 1984), pp. 17ff.,117ff. 

314 



THE HOLY WAR 12:10-11 

Dragon's tail swept a third of the stars of heaven and threw 
them to the Land; now the Dragon himself is thrown down to 
the Land with his evil angels. In the following verses, St. John 
explains the vision, telling us clearly when this great ejection of 
the demons took place. 

10-11 The explanation comes, as it often does with St. John, 
in a call to worship from a loud Voice in heaven, exhorting the 
assembly to praise the Lord for His marvelous works. The result 
of Michael's victory over the Dragon is fourfold, covering the 
earth: Now have come the salvation — the victorious deliverance 
into a "wide, open space" — and the power, and the Kingdom of 
our God, and the authority of His Christ. The outcome of the 
Holy War is this: The Kingdom has arrived! The power of God 
and the authority of Christ have come, have been made mani- 
fest in history, because the Accuser of our brethren has been 
thrown down, the one who accused them before our God day 
and night. 

This great apocalyptic battle, the greatest fight in all history, 
has already been fought and won by the Lord Christ, St. J ohn 
says, and the Dragon has been overthrown. Moreover, the mar- 
tyrs who spent their lives in Christ's service did not die in vain; 
they are partakers in the victory: They conquered the Dragon by 
the blood of the Lamb - by means of i6 His definitive, once-for- 
all victory — and by the word of their testimony. The martyrs' 
faithfulness to Christ is demonstrated in that they did not love 
their life even to death, knowing that "he who loves his life loses 
it; and he who hates his life in this world shall keep it to life eter- 
nal" (John 12:25). 

The Holy War between Michael and the Dragon therefore 
cannot possibly be a portrayal of the final battle of history at the 
end of the world. It cannot be future at all. It is not a battle to 
take place at the Second Coming. The victory over the Dragon, 
according to St. John, does not take place by means of a cata- 
clysmic event at the end of history, but by means of the cataclys- 



36. Blood and word are both in the accusative case, but the preposition 
should be read in the sense of means as well as grounds here (cf. Matt. 15:6; 
John 6:57;15:3;Eph. 5:18; Rev. 13:14); see IsbonT. Beckwith, The Apocalypse 
of John: Studies in Introduction with a Critical and Exegetical Commentary 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1919] 1979), p. 627. 

315 



12:10-11 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

mic event that took place in the middle of history: the sacrifice 
of the Lamb. The language used to describe the basis of 
Michael's conquest has nothing to do with the Second Coming, 
but it has everything to do with the First Coming. The martyrs 
overcome by means of the shed blood of Christ, and by means 
of the fearless proclamation of the Gospel. The cosmic victory 
over the Dragon takes place through the Gospel, and the Gospel 
alone -the Gospel in its objective aspect (the work of Christ), 
and the Gospel in its subjective aspect (the proclamation of the 
work of Christ). 

When, therefore, did Satan fall from heaven? He fell, defini- 
tively, during the ministry of Christ, culminating in the atone- 
ment, the resurrection, and the ascension of the Lord to His 
heavenly throne. We can see the stages of the Holy War 
throughout the message of the Gospels. Whereas the activity of 
demons seems relatively rare in the Old Testament, the New Tes- 
tament records numerous outbreaks of demonism. Open the 
pages of the New Testament, and demons are almost inescapa- 
ble. Why? What made the difference? It was the presence of 
Christ. He went on the offensive, entering history to do battle 
with the Dragon, and immediately the Dragon counterattacked, 
fighting back with all his might, wreaking as much havoc as pos- 
sible. And when we see the Lord warring against the devil, we 
also see Him being given angelic assistance (cf. Matt. 4:11; 
26:53; Luke 22:43). As Michael leading the angels, Christ led 
His apostles against the Dragon, driving him out of his position. 
The message of the Gospels is that in the earthly ministry of 
Christ and His disciples, Satan lost his place of power and fell 
down to the earth: 

And the seventy returned with joy, saying, "Lord, even the 
demons are subject to us in Your name." And He said to them, "I 
was watching Satan fall from heaven like lightning. Behold, I 
have given you authority to tread upon serpents and scorpions, 
and over all the power of the enemy, and nothing shall injure 
you. Nevertheless, do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are sub- 
ject to you, but rejoice that your names are recorded in heaven." 
(Luke 10:17-20) 

What Revelation 12 portrays is just that: not only the subjec- 
tion of the demons to the saints, but the recording of the saints' 

316 



THE HOLY WAR 12:12 

names in heaven - their sentence of justification, of right stand- 
ing in heaven's hall of justice, for their accuser has been thrown 
out of court, his false testimony invalidated. The word for con- 
quer in this verse (nikao) carries the connotation, not only of a 
military victory, but of a legal victory as well; the winning of a 
favorable verdict (cf. Rem. 3:4). The definitive accomplishment 
of this, of course, was Christ's atonement for the sins of His peo- 
ple; thus, just before He offered up Himself as the sacrifice, our 
Lord said: "Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of 
this world shall be thrown out" (John 12:31). In Christ's victory, 
salvation and the Kingdom came to earth. Satan was defeated. 
The very language of the Gospels bears this out. The stand- 
ard term for Christ's "casting out" of the demons throughout 
His ministry (ekballo; cf. Matt. 8:16,31; 9:33-34; 10:1, 8; 12:24, 
26-28) is simply an intensive form of the word used repeatedly in 
Revelation 12 for the "throwing down" of the Dragon (ballo). 
And Jesus announced: "If I cast out demons by the Spirit of 
God, then the Kingdom of God has come upon you" (Matt. 
12:28). The message of Revelation is consistent with that of the 
New Testament as a whole: Christ has arrived, Satan has been 
thrown down, and the Kingdom has come. By His death and 
resurrection, Christ "disarmed" the demons, triumphing over 
them (Col. 2:15). Satan has been rendered powerless (Heb. 
2:14-15), and so St. Paul was able to assure the believers in 
Rome that "the God of peace will soon crush Satan under your 
feet" (Rem. 16:20). The Cross was the mark, Jesus said, of the 
judgment of the world (John 12:31) - or, as John Calvin ren- 
dered it, the reformation and restoration of the world. 37 The il- 
legitimate ruler of the world was cast out by the coming of 
Christ. As He announced at His Ascension, "All authority (ex- 
ousia) in heaven and on earth has been given to Me" (Matt. 
28:18). St. John's vision declares the same thing: The Kingdom 
of our God and the authority (exousia) of His Christ have come! 

12 The Voice from heaven exhorts the congregation to exul- 
tant worship: For this reason, rejoice, O heavens, and you who 
tabernacle in them. Who are these who tabernacle (not just 



37. John Calvin, Commentary on the Gospel According to John (Grand 
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1979), Vol. 2, p. 36; cf. Ronald S. Wallace, Cal- 
vin's Doctrine of the Christian Life (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, [1959] 

1982), p. 110. 

317 



12:12 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

dwell) in heaven? St. John has made it plain by this time that the 
Church's worship takes place, really and truly, before the hea- 
venly throne of God (4:4-11; 5:8-14; 7:9-17). The New Testament 
clearly reflects this understanding on the part of the apostles and 
the early Church, declaring that God has raised us up with 
Christ to the heavenly places (Eph.2:6), where we have our citi- 
zenship (Phil. 3:20). Our worship is beheld by the angelic multi- 
tude (1 Cor. 11:10; Eph. 3:10), for we have come to the heavenly 
Jerusalem, where innumerable angels are gathered in festal as- 
sembly with the Church (Heb. 12:22-23). Those who are called 
to joyful praise for the coming of the Kingdom and the defeat 
of the Dragon, therefore, are the Church. We have followed the 
Child in His victorious Ascension (Eph. 1:20-22; 2:6), and have 
become His Tabernacle (cf. 7:15; 13:6). 

But Christ's definitive conquest of the Dragon does not mean 
the end of his activity altogether. Indeed, like a cornered rat he 
becomes even more frantically vicious, his snarling rage increas- 
ing with his frustration and impotence. The Voice from heaven 
thus declares: Woe to the Land and the Sea, because the Dragon 
has come down to you, having great wrath, knowing that he has 
only a short time. The Seventh Trumpet has sounded (11:15), and 
the Third Woe has arrived (see 8:13; 11:14). The domain of the 
Dragon, following his defeat at the Ascension of Christ, has now 
become the Land and the Sea; he has lost forever the Edenic 
sanctuary, which had been surrendered to him b y Adam. Thus, in 
Chapter 13, St. John sees two great Beasts in the Dragon's image, 
arising from the Sea and the Land. The Sea, in St. John's im- 
agery, will turn out to be the heathen nations (see below, on 
13:1-2), raging and foaming in their hatred against the Lord and 
His Christ (cf. Ps. 2:1). And, as we have seen repeatedly, Israelis 
represented by the Land. The Voice is warning that both Israel 
and the Empire will become demonized in Satan's mad frenzy to 
hold onto the decayed, withering remnants of his illicit rule. The 
Dragon has only a brief period left in which to bring about the 
ruin of the Church, while she is still connected to old Israel; he 
will seek to stir up Land and Sea, first in a demonic partnership 
against the Church, and then in a war against each other, in order 
to crush the Church between them. Like a deposed gangster on 
the run, the Dragon tries to consolidate his power for a last, des- 
perate stand. But he knows he is doomed; time has almost run out. 

318 



THE HOLY WAR 12:13-14 

The Dragon Attacks the Church (12:13-17) 

13 And when the Dragon saw that he was thrown down to the 
Land, he persecuted the Woman who gave birth to the male 
Child. 

14 And two wings of the great Eagle were given to the Woman, 
in order that she might fly into the wilderness to her place, so 
that she might be nourished for a time and times and half a 
time, from the face of the Serpent. 

15 And the Serpent threw water like a river out of his mouth 
after the Woman, so that he might cause her to be swept 
away with the flood. 

16 And the Land helped the Woman, and the Land opened its 
mouth and drank up the river which the Dragon threw out 
of his mouth. 

17 And the Dragon was enraged with the Woman, and went off 
to make war with the rest of her seed, who keep the com- 
mandments of God and hold to the testimony of Jesus. 

13 St. John returns to the theme mentioned in verse 6: the 
Woman's flight from the Dragon. This happens as a direct result 
of the Dragon's defeat at the hands of Michael, for when the 
Dragon saw that he was thrown down to the Land, he perse- 
cuted the Woman who had given birth to the male Child. It can- 
not be emphasized too greatly that for St. John and his audience 
this is one of the most crucial points of the entire chapter. The 
Dragon persecutes the Church precisely because Christ defeated 
him. We must remember this as we read of the Dragon's hatch- 
ing of conspiracies, his crafty backstage machinations to bring 
about the Church's destruction; all of his attacks on the Church 
are rooted in the fact that he has already been conquered! 

It is important for our interpretation to note also that the 
persecution of the Woman arises in connection with the 
Dragon's fall to the Land of Israel. It is there, first of all, that he 
seeks to destroy the Church. 

14 But the Woman is delivered, flying into the wilderness on 
two wings of the great Eagle. St. John again uses imagery from 
the Exodus, in which the angel-filled pillars of the Glory-Cloud 
were described as "eagles' wings," by which God had brought 
Israel to Himself in the wilderness, to be a people for His own 

319 



12:14 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

possession, a Kingdom of priests to God, a holy nation (Ex. 
19:4-6; cf. 1 Pet. 2:9-10). The picture is developed further when 
Moses, surveying the history of the Covenant people at the end 
of his life, speaks of how God saved Israel in the wilderness: 

He found him in a desert land, 

And in the howling waste of a wilderness; 

He encircled him, He cared for him, 

He guarded him as the pupil of His eye. 

Like an eagle that stirs up its nest, 

That hovers over its young, 

He spread His wings and caught them, 

He carried them on His pinions. (Deut. 32:10-11) 

Moses uses two key words in this passage: waste and hover. 
Both of these words occur only one other time in the entire Pen- 
tateuch, and again they occur together, in Genesis 1:2. Waste is 
used to describe the uninhabitable condition of the earth at its 
creation ("without form"); and hover is Moses' term for the 
Spirit's activity of "moving" in creative power over the face of 
the deep. God is not careless with language. His prophet Moses 
had a specific reason for repeating those key words in his fare- 
well address. He was underscoring the message that the salva- 
tion of Israel was a creation event. The Covenant on Sinai was a 
re-creation, a reorganization of the world. 38 Similarly, St. John 
borrows terminology from the same passage in Moses to present 
that message to the Church: God has brought to fulfillment the 
provisional re-creations of the old order. The coming of Christ 
has brought about the definitive re-creation, the New Covenant. 
And, as in the days of old when God miraculously preserved 
Israel in all her afflictions, providing her a Paradise in the midst 
of a wilderness, so He will now nourish and cherish the Church, 
His Bride and the Mother of His only begotten Son. His Cove- 
nant people dwell in the shade of the Glory-Cloud, in the 
shadow of His wings (Ps. 17:8; 36:7; 57:1; 61:4; 91:4, 11). The 
wings of the Eagle, which signify death and destruction to the 
enemies of the covenant (Deut. 28:49; Job 39:27-30; Jer. 48:40; 



38. David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion P ress, 1985), p. 59; Meredith G. Kline, Images of 
the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980), pp. 13ff. 

320 



THE HOLY WAR 12:15-16 

Hos. 8:1; Hab. 1:8; Matt. 24:28), are an emblem of peace, secur- 
ity, and blessing to the heirs of Covenant grace. 

Again (cf. v. 6), St. John makes the point that the Woman's 
flight into the wilderness is not evidence of her abandonment by 
God; it is not a sign that she has lost the battle, or that events 
are out of control. Rather, she flies on eagle's wings above the 
waters (v. 15) to her place, so that she might be nourished dur- 
ing the period of tribulation (cf. Luke 4:25-26), the standard 
three and a half years of judgment mentioned in the prophets - 
or, as St. John gives it here in the language of Daniel 7:25 and 
12:7, a time and times and half a time. 

Preterist commentators have traditionally seen this passage 
in terms of the escape of the Judean Church from the Edomite 
and Roman invasions during the Jewish War, when, in obe- 
dience to Christ's commands (Matt. 24:15-28), the Christians 
escaped to shelter in the caves of the desert. 39 There is nothing 
wrong with this view, as far as it goes, but it does not go far 
enough. For St. John's allegory of the Woman is the story of the 
Church, not only a particular branch of it. The deliverance of 
the Judean Church must be seen as the primary historical 
referent of this text, but with the realization that her experience 
is representative and illustrative of the deliverance of the 
Church as a whole in this difficult period, when the Lord pre- 
pared a table for her in the face of her enemies (Ps. 23:5). 

15-16 St. John continues his Exodus imagery, reminding us 
of when the children of Israel had been trapped "between the 
devil and the deep Red Sea": And the Serpent threw water like a 
river out of his mouth after the Woman, so that he might cause 
her to be swept away with the flood. Farrer says: "The woman is 
treated as the congregation of Israel, saved from Egypt, lifted 
by the Lord on eagle's pinions and brought to Sinai. The 
dragon's pursuit of her by throwing a waterflood after her is a 
generalized image for the action of Pharaoh, who (1) commands 
Israelite children and especially Moses to be washed down the 
Nile, (2) comes out after escaping Israel with a host, and (3) 



39. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, iii.v, 

321 



12:15-16 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

counts on the Red Sea to shut Israel in." 40 The Biblical imagery 
was familiar: a menacing river seeking to overwhelm God's peo- 
ple, flowing from the mouth of her enemies (Ps. 18:4, 16; 
124:3-6; Isa. 8:5-8; 59:19; Jer. 46:7-8; 47:2; Hos. 5:10). 

But again, as in the Exodus, the Dragon's plan is foiled: The 
Land helped the Woman, and the Land opened its mouth and 
drank up the river which the Dragon threw out of his mouth. 41 
The picture is partially based on the incident recorded in Num- 
bers 16:28-33, when the earth opened its mouth and swallowed 
the instigators of a rebellion against Moses. Milton Terry sum- 
marizes the point of St. John's Old Testament allusions in this 
passage: "The great thought in all these images is that divine 
power is put forth to deliver and sustain the New Testament 
Church of God in the day of her persecution - the same power 
that of old wrought the miracles of Egypt, and of the Red Sea, 
and of the wilderness ."4 2 That is indeed St. John's emphasis 
here. The Church is divinely protected and preserved through 
all her tribulations. No matter what the Dragon does in his at- 
tempts to destroy the Church - even bringing about the Jewish 
Revolt, causing the Edomites and the Remans to slaughter the 
inhabitants of Israel - the Church escapes his power. By the 
time Rome attacks, the Woman is long gone; the Land of Israel 
swallows up the river of wrath, absorbing the blow in her place. 
The destruction of Jerusalem left the true City and Temple 
unharmed, for they were safe with the Woman under the 
shadow of the Almighty. 



40. Farrer,p. 148. Farrer also points out the astronomical imagery involved 
here: "There is the great Eagle of the starry heaven, with his two wings, and 
the Lady of the Zodiac may well receive their help in fleeing from the pursuing 
Scorpion; for we all hope to escape the baleful omen of his name by accepting 
the Eagle in his place, when we reckon the four faces of the sky. ... It is after 
the woman has received the Eagle's wings that the Dragon shoots a river at her. 
This is astrological, too; the great river of the sky, the Milky Way, goes up 
from the Scorpion and sweeps over the Eagle" (ibid.). 

41. Interestingly, both Christ and the Dragon are pictured in Revelation as 
spitting people out of their mouths: Christ vomits out the apostates (3 :16), and 
the Dragon throws out floods of armies (12:16-17) (just as he had thrown the 
stars to earth in 12:4). In a related figure, the Land vomits out Canaanites and 
apostate Israelites in Leviticus 18:28, but here it swallows the river spat out by 
the Dragon. 

42. Terry, p. 390. 

322 



THE HOLY WAR 12:17 

17 The Dragon had only "a short time" (v. 12) to destroy the 
Church, and he failed again. Frustrated in his attempt to destroy 
the Mother Church, he was enraged with the Woman, and went 
off to make war with the rest of her seed, the Christians who were 
unharmed by the Dragon's war with the Woman. How is the 
Church symbolized by both the Woman and her children? "These 
distinctions are easily made and maintained. The Church, con- 
sidered as an institution and an organic body, is distinguishable 
from her children, as Isaiah 66:7-8 and Galatians 4:22-26 clearly 
show. . . . We accordingly observe that the Church is in one 
point of view the totality of all her members of children; in 
other ways, familiar to the Scripture, her individual members 
are thought of as related to her as children to a mother." 43 

Having been thwarted in his designs to destroy both the 
Mother and her Seed, the Dragon turns in rage against the rest 
of her seed, the (predominantly Gentile) Christian Church 
throughout the Empire. Let us note well St. John's description 
of these brothers and sisters of the Lord Jesus Christ: They keep 
the commandments of God and hold to the testimony of Jesus. 
The definition of the Christian, from one perspective, is that he 
is a member of the organized assembly of the people of God; 
just as importantly, he is defined in terms of his ethical conform- 
ity to the law of God. 

And by this we know that we have come to know Him, if we 
keep His commandments. The one who says, "I have come to 
know Him," and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, 
and the truth is not in him. (1 John 2:3-4) 

For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; 
and His commandments are not burdensome. (1 John 5:3) 

As St. John has already informed us, the saints overcome 
the Dragon through the word of their testimony and their faith- 
ful obedience, even unto death (v. 11). The following chapters 
will detail several crucial stages in the continuing war between 
the seed of the Serpent and the seed of the Woman. The passage 



43. Ibid., p. 391. A related example is the Biblical use of the expressions 
Zionand Daughter ofZion (cf. Ps. 9:11, 14; Cant. 3:11) and children of Zion 
(cf. Ps. 149:2). 

323 



12:17 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

is not meant to be chronologically accurate, as if the Dragon 
turns against the rest of the Church only after the failure of the 
Jewish War. Rather, the flight of the Judean Church is only the 
culmination of a series of deliverances throughout the Last 
Days, symbolized by the flight of the Woman. St. John is de- 
scribing in images the various stratagems devised by Satan for 
destroying the Church, and he shows them all to be complete 
failures. The Dragon is fighting a losing battle, for he has 
already been defeated at the Cross and at the Tomb. There is not 
a square inch of ground in heaven or on earth or under the earth 
where there is peace between the Serpent and the Seed of the 
Woman, and Christ has already won overwhelmingly, on every 
front. Ever since Christ's ascension, world history has been a 
mopping-up operation. The Church Militant, so long as she is 
the Church Obedient, will be the Church Triumphant as well. 



324 



13 
LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 

The Book of Revelation is a Covenant document. It is a 
prophecy, like the prophecies of the Old Testament. This means 
that it is not concerned with making "predictions" of astonish- 
ing events as such. As prophecy, its focus is redemptive and eth- 
ical. Its concern is with the Covenant. The Bible is God's revela- 
tion about His Covenant with His people. It was written to show 
what God has done to save His people and glorify Himself 
through them. 

Therefore, when God speaks of the Roman Empire in the 
Book of Revelation, His purpose is not to tell us titillating bits 
of gossip about life at Nero's court. He speaks of Rome only in 
relation to the Covenant and the history of redemption. "We 
should keep in mind that in all this prophetic symbolism we 
have before us the Roman empire as a persecuting power. This 
Apocalypse is not concerned with the history of Rome. . . . The 
Beast is not a symbol of Rome, but of the great Roman world- 
power, conceived as the organ of the old serpent, the Devil, to 
persecute the scattered saints of God." 1 The most important 
fact about Rome, from the viewpoint of Revelation, is not that 
it is a powerful state, but that it is Beast, in opposition to the 
God of the Covenant; the issue is not essentially political but re- 
ligious (cf. comments on 11:7). The Roman Empire is not seen in 
terms of itself, but solely in terms of 1) the Land (Israel), and 2) 
the Church. 



1. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic: A Study of the Most Notable Reve- 
lations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton 
and Mains, 1898), pp. 393f. 

325 



13:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRQMPETS 

The Beast from the Sea (13:1-10) 

1 And I was stationed on the sand of the sea. And I saw a 
Beast coming up out of the sea, having ten horns and seven 
heads, and on his horns were ten diadems, and on his heads 
were blasphemous names. 

2 And the Beast which I saw was like a leopard, and his feet 
were like those of a bear, and his mouth like the mouth of a 
lion. And the Dragon gave him his power and his throne and 
his great authority. 

3 And I saw one of his heads as if it had been smitten to death, 
and his fatal wound was healed. And the whole Land won- 
dered after the Beast; 

4 and they worshiped the Dragon, because he gave his author- 
ity to the Beast; and they worshiped the Beast, saying: Who 
is like the Beast, and who is able to wage war with him? 

5 And there was given to him a mouth speaking great things 
and blasphemies; and authority to make war for forty-two 
months was given to him. 

6 And he opened his mouth in blasphemies against God, to 
blaspheme His Name and His Tabernacle, those who taber- 
nacle in heaven. 

7 And it was given to him to make war with the saints and to 
overcome them; and authority over every tribe and people 
and tongue and nation was given to him. 

8 And all who dwell on the Land will worship him, everyone 
whose name has not been written from the foundation of the 
world in the Book of Life of the Lamb who has been slain. 

9 If anyone has an ear, let him hear. 

10 If anyone is destined for captivity, to captivity he goes; if 
anyone kills with the sword, with the sword he must be killed. 
Here is the perseverance and the faith of the saints. 

1-2 St. John tells us that, just as he had ascended to God's 
Throneroom in order to behold the heavenly world (4:1; cf. 
Ezek. 3:14; 8:3), the Spirit now stationed him on the sand of the 
sea, the vantage point from which he is able to view the Beast 
coming up out of the sea. In a visual, dramatic sense, the mighty 
Roman Empire did seem to arise out of the sea, from the Italian 
peninsula across the ocean from the Land. More than this, how- 
ever, the Biblical symbolism of the sea is in view here. The sea is, 
as we saw in 9:1-3, associated with the Abyss, the abode of the 
demons, who were imprisoned there after having been expelled 

326 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:1-2 

from the Garden. The Abyss is the "Deep" of Genesis 1:2, "with- 
out form and void," uninhabitable by man. It is away from the 
dry land of human environment, and is the place where the 
demons are kept imprisoned as long as men are faithful to God. 
When men apostatize, the demons are released; as man is pro- 
gressively restored, the evil spirits are sent back into the Abyss 

(Luke 8:26-33). Here we see the ultimate source of the "beastli- 
ness" of the Beast: In essence, he comes from the sea, from the 
chaotic deep-and-darkness of the Abyss, which had to be con- 
quered, formed, and filled by the light of the Spirit (Gen. 1:2; 
John 1:5). This is not to suggest that there was any real conflict 
between God and His creation; in the beginning, everything was 
"very good." The sea is most fundamentally an image of life. 
But after the Fall, the picture of the raging deep is used and de- 
veloped in Scripture as a symbol of the world in chaos through 
the rebellion of men and nations against God: "The wicked are 
like the tossing sea; for it cannot be quiet, and its waters tossup 
refuse and mud" (Isa. 57:20; cf. Isa. 17: 12). St. John is told later 
that "the waters which you saw ... are peoples and multitudes 
and nations and tongues" (17: 15). Out of this chaotic, rebellious 
mass of humanity emerged Rome, an entire empire founded on 
the premise of opposition to God. 

The Beast has ten horns and seven heads, a mirror-image (cf. 
Gen. 1 :26) of the Dragon (12:3), who gives the Beast his power 
and his throne and great authority. The ten crowned horns 
(powers)' of the Beast are explained in 17:12 in terms of the gov- 
ernors of the ten imperial provinces, while the seven heads are 
explained as the line of the Caesars (17:9-11): Nero is one of the 
"heads." We must keep in mind the logical distinction already 
drawn between sense (the meaning and associations of a sym- 
bol) and referent (the special significance of the symbol as it is 
used in a particular case). The connotations of heads and horns 
are the same in both the Dragon and the Beast, but they refer to 
different objects. 

In a nightmarish parody of the Biblical High Priest, who 
wore the divine Name on his forehead (Ex. 28:36-38), the Beast 
displays on his heads blasphemous names: According to the 
Roman imperial theology, the Caesars were gods. Each emperor 



2. Cf. 1 Kings 22:11; Zech. 1:18-21; Ps. 75:10. 

327 



13:1-2 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

was called Augustus or Sebastos, meaning One to be worshiped; 
they also took on the name divus (god) and even Deus and 
Theos (God). Many temples were erected to them throughout 
the Empire, especially, as we have noted, in Asia Minor. The 
Roman Caesars received honor belonging only to the one true 
God; Nero commanded absolute obedience, and even erected a 
120-foot-high image of himself. For this reason St. Paul called 
Caesar "the man of sin"; he was, St. Paul said, "the son of de- 
struction, who opposes and exalts himself above every so-called 
god or object of worship, so that he takes his seat in the temple 
of God, displaying himself as being God" (2 Thess. 2:3-4). St. 
John emphasizes this aspect of the Beast: And there was given 
to him a mouth speaking arrogant words and blasphemies. . . . 
And he opened his mouth in blasphemies against God (13:5-6). 
The Christians were persecuted because they refused to join in 
this idolatrous Emperor-cult. 

The Roman Empire is further symbolized as a ravenous, fer- 
ocious animal, untamed and under the Curse. St. John says the 
appearance of the Beast was like a leopard, with feet like those 
of a bear, and a mouth like the mouth of a lion: "The three ani- 
mals, thus combined by the writer, symbolize swiftness and fer- 
ocity in springing upon the prey, tenacity in holding it and drag- 
ging it away, and a ravenous appetite for devouring." 3 These are 
also the very animals (listed in reverse order) used to describe 
the first three of the four great world empires in Daniel 7:1-6 
(Babylon, Medo-Persia, and Greece; cf. Daniel's description of 
the same empires under a different symbol, in Dan. 2:31-45). 
The fourth empire, Rome, partakes of the evil, beast-like 
characteristics of the other empires, but it is much worse: "Be- 
hold, a fourth Beast, dreadful and terrifying and extremely 
strong; and it had large iron teeth. It devoured and crushed, and 
trampled down the remainder with its feet; and it was different 
from all the beasts that were before it, and it had ten horns" 
(Dan. 7:7). 4 This, as we noted at 12:3, is the origin of the 



3. Moses Stuart, A Commentary on the Apocalypse (Andover: Allen, Mor- 
rill and Wardwell, two vols., 1845), Vol. 2, p. 276. 

4. According to Moses Stuart and Milton Terry, Daniel's beasts are Baby- 
lon, Media, Persia, and Greece. Even if this were the case (which I doubt), its 
"rebirth" in the imagery of Revelation would mean simply that Rome com- 
bines the worst characteristics of the four preceding world empires. 

328 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:3-4 

Dragon's (and thus the Beast's) ten horns and seven heads (the 
three heads of beasts 1, 2, and 4, plus the four heads of beast 3: 
Dan. 7:6). The Beast of Revelation is clearly the Roman Em- 
pire, which "combined in itself all the elements of the terrible 
and the oppressive, which had existed in the aggregate in the 
other great empires that preceded it; its extension too was equal 
to them all united." 5 

This Beast, however, is not just an institution, but a person; 
specifically, as we shall see, it is the Emperor Nero. This is be- 
cause, particularly the way the Bible looks at things, the two 
could be considered as one. Rome was, to some extent, cove- 
nantally identified with its leader, as the human race was with 
Adam; the Empire was embodied and represented in the reign- 
ing Caesar (Nero). Thus St. John's prophecy can shift back and 
forth between them, or consider them both together, under the 
same designation. And both Nero and the Empire were sunk in 
degrading, degenerate, bestial activities. Nero, who murdered 
numerous members of his own family (including his pregnant 
wife, whom he kicked to death); who was a homosexual, the 
final stage in degeneracy (Rem. 1:24-32); whose favorite aphro- 
disiac consisted of watching people suffer the most horrifying 
and disgusting tortures; who dressed up as a wild beast in order 
to attack and rape male and female prisoners; who used the 
bodies of Christians burning at the stake as the original "Roman 
candles" to light up his filthy garden parties; who launched the 
first imperial persecution of Christians at the instigation of the 
Jews, in order to destroy the Church; this animalistic pervert 
was the ruler of the most powerful empire on earth. And he set 
the tone for his subjects. Rome was the moral sewer of the 
world. 6 

3-4 And I saw one of his heads as if it had been slain, and 
his fatal wound was healed. Some ha T 'e pointed out that, after 
Nero was killed, the rumor began to spread that he would rise 



5. Ibid. 

6. See Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars, Robert Graves, trans. (New York: 
Penguin Books, revised cd., 1979), pp. 213-46; Tacitus, The Annals of Imperial 
Rome, Michael Grant, trans. (New York: Penguin Books, revised cd., 1977), 
pp. 252-397; Miriam T. Griffin, Nero: The End of a Dynasty (New Haven: Yale 
University Press, 1984). 

329 



13:3-4 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

again and recapture the throne; in some way, they suppose, St. 
John must be referring to this Nero redivivus myth. This, it 
seems to me, is a very unsatisfactory method of dealing with 
Scripture. St. John mentions the Beast's "death- wound" three 
times in this passage (see v. 12, 14); clearly, this is much more 
than a casual symbol, and we should attempt a Biblical explana- 
tion for it. 7 

The Beast, as we saw, resembles the Dragon. The fact that he 
receives a head wound should make us think of the scene in the 
Garden of Eden, when God promised that Christ would come 
and crush the Dragon's head (Gen. 3:15). Daniel had prophesied 
that in the days of the Roman rulers, Christ's Kingdom would 
crush the Satanic empires and replace them, filling the earth. 
Accordingly, apostolic testimony proclaimed that Christ's King- 
dom had come, that the devil had been defeated, disarmed, and 
bound, and that all nations would begin to flow toward the 
mountain of the Lord's House. Within the first generation, the 
Gospel spread rapidly around the world, to all the nations; 
churches sprang up everywhere, and members of Caesar's own 
household came into the faith (Phil. 4:22). In fact, Tiberius 
Caesar even formally requested that the Roman Senate officially 
acknowledge Christ's divinity. 8 For a time, therefore, it looked 



7. This point is brought up by virtually every commentary that espouses (or 
even takes notice of) the preterist interpretation. It is generally considered to 
be a crucial argument; the impression is given that the case as a whole stands 
or falls with the Nero redivivus myth. My objections to its use as the interpret- 
ive crux are, briefly, as follows: John was writing while Nero was still alive, 
and could not have been appealing to a myth which had not yet arisen; more 
importantly, such an approach is flawed since it uses pagan fables rather than 
Scripture as its primary source for interpretation. The Bible itself is the broad 
hermeneutical context for the canonical books. The value of extrabiblical liter- 
ature is, at best, secondary. (Thus the redivivus myth may be of some minor 
importance as a historical complement to the theological perspective; indeed, 
it is possible that a mistaken interpretation of John's prophecy gave rise to the 
myth in the first place.) 

8. This is reported by Tertullianin his Apology, chapter 5 (The Ante-Nicene 
Fathers, Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, eds.; Eerdmans, 1973): 
"Unless gods give satisfaction to men, there will be no deification for them: the 
god will have to propitiate the man. Tiberius accordingly, in whose days the 
Christian name made its entry into the world, having himself received intelli- 
gence from Palestine of events which had clearly shown the truth of Christ's 
divinity, brought the matter before the Senate, with his own decision in favor 
of Christ. The Senate, because it had not given the approval itself, rejected his 
proposal. Caesar held to his opinion, threatening wrath against all accusers of 

330 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:3-4 

as if a coup were taking place: Christianity was in the ascendant, 
and soon would gain control. Satan's head had been crushed, 
and with it the Roman Empire had been wounded to death with 
the sword (see 13:14) of the Gospel. 9 

But then the tables were reversed. Although the Gospel had 
spread everywhere, so had heresy and apostasy; and under per- 
secution by the Jews and the Roman State, great masses of 
Christians began falling away (1 Tim. 1:3-7, 19-20; 4:1-3; 6:20-21; 
2 Tim. 2:16-18;3:l-9, 13; 4:10, 14-16; Tit. 1:10-16; 1 John 2:18-19). 
The New Testament gives the definite impression that most of 
the churches fell apart and abandoned the faith; under Nero's 
persecution, the Church seemed to have been stamped out en- 
tirely. The Beast had received the head-wound, the wound unto 
death - yet it still lived. The reality, of course, was that Christ 
had defeated the Dragon and the Beast; but the implications of 
His victory still had to be worked out; the saints had yet to over- 
come, and take possession (cf. Dan. 7:21-22; Rev. 12:11). 

And the whole Land wondered after the Beast; and they 
worshiped the Dragon, because he gave his authority to the 
Beast; and they worshiped the Beast, saying: Who is like the 
Beast, and who is able to make war against him? St. John is not 
speaking of the world (the "earth") following the Beast; the 
word he uses here should be translated Land, meaning Israel. 
We know this because the context identifies his worshipers as 
those who dwell on the Land (Rev. 13:8, 12, 14) - a technical 
phrase used twelve times in Revelation to denote apostate Israel 
(see above on 3:10). It is true, of course, that Nero was loved all 
over the Empire as the benevolent provider of welfare and en- 
tertainment. But it is Israel in particular which is condemned for 
Emperor-worship. Faced with a choice between Christ and 
Caesar, they had proclaimed: We have no king but Caesar! 

the Christians. Consult your histories . . ."(pp. 21f.).A. Cleveland Coxe 
comments: "Great stress is to be placed on the fact thatTertullian was proba- 
bly a juriconsult, familiar with the Roman archives, and influenced by them in 
his own acceptance of Divine Truth. It is not supposable that such a man 
would have hazarded his bold appeal to the records, in remonstrating with the 
Senate and in the very faces of the Emperor and his colleagues, had he not 
known that the evidence was irrefragable" (pp.57f.). 

9. The Biblical head-crushing theme is especially prominent in the Book of 
J udges; seej ames B.J ordan, Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, 
TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985). 

331 



13:5-7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

(John 19:15). "With this cry Judaism was, in the person of its 
representatives, guilty of denial of God, of blasphemy, of apos- 
tasy. It committed suicide." 10 Their reaction to Caesar's appar- 
ently victorious war against the Church (Rev. 11:7) was awe and 
worship^ Israel sided with Caesar and the Empire against Christ 
and the Church. Ultimately, therefore, they were worshiping the 
Dragon, and for this reason Jesus Himself called their worship 
assemblies synagogues of Satan (Rev. 2:9; 3:9). 

5-7 Again St. John draws our attention to the Beast's blas- 
phemies against God (cf. 13:1). Specifically, he says, the Beast 
seeks to blaspheme His Name and His Tabernacle, those who 
tabernacle in heaven. Our citizenship is in heaven (Phil. 3:20), 
we are enthroned therein Christ, our representative (Eph. 1:20; 
2:6), and, as we have seen, the Church's official worship takes 
place in theheavenlies, with myriads of angels in festal assembly 
(Heb. 12:22-23; cf. comments on 8:1-2). In contrast to those 
who reject the faith, who "dwell on the earth," the New Cove- 
nant people tabernacle in heaven around the throne of God. In 
the same breath, therefore, St. John tells the Church of both the 
Beast's cruel opposition to them and their certainty of protect- 
ion around the Throne in the heavenly court. 

Alexander Schmemann has beautifully drawn attention to 
the nature of worship as the Church's weekly ascension to 
heaven (cf. Ex. 24:9-11; 34:1-8, 29-35; Mark 9:1-29): "The early 
Christians realized that in order to become the temple of the 
Holy Spirit they must ascend to heaven where Christ has ascended. 
They realized also that this ascension was the very condition of 
their mission in the world, of their ministry to the world. For 
there - in heaven - they were immersed in the new life of the 
Kingdom; and when, after this 'liturgy of ascension,' they re- 
turned into the world, their faces reflected the light, the 'joy and 
peace' of that Kingdom and they were truly its witnesses. They 
brought no programs and no theories; but wherever they went, 
the seeds of the Kingdom sprouted, faith was kindled, life was 
transfigured, things impossible were made possible. They were 
witnesses, and when they were asked, 'Whence shines this light, 
where is the source of its power?' they knew what to answer and 
where to lead men. In church today, we so often find we meet 



10. Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah (McLean, 
VA: MacDonald Publishing Company, two vols., n.d.), Vol. 2, p. 581. 

332 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:5-7 

only the same old world, not Christ and His Kingdom. We do 
not realize that we never get anywhere because we never leave 
any place behind us." n 

The Beast was given authority to act for forty-two months 
and to make war with the saints and to overcome them. As I ob- 
served above (see comments on 11:2), the period of 42 months 
(or three and a half years, a broken seven) is a symbolic figure in 
prophetic language, signifying a time of trouble, when the ene- 
mies of God are in power, or when judgment is being poured 
out, while God's people wait for the coming of the Kingdom (as 
we have already noted, the Beast oppressed the Old Covenant 
saints for 42 generations, according to Matthew 1:1-17). Its pro- 
phetic usage is not primarily literal, although it is interesting 
that Nero's persecution of the Church did in fact last a full 42 
months, from the middle of November 64 to the beginning of 
J une 68. This period of 42 months thus corresponds (but is not 
necessarily identical) to the 42 months/1,260 days of 11:2-3 and 
the "time, times, and half a time" of 12:14. During the time of 
the Beast's triumph he wields authority over the fourfold earth: 
every tribe and people and tongue and nation. This was true of 
the Roman Empire, as it was true of Beast in general. Satan ruled 
"all the kingdoms of the world" (cf. Matt. 4:8-9) as their 
"prince" (John 12:31; cf. Dan. 10:13, 20). His authority was 
"legal," after a sort, since Adam had abdicated the throne; yet it 
was illegitimate as well. The Church Fathers make much of the 
fact that the Second Adam won back the world from Satan's do- 
minion by just and lawful means, and not by force. 12 



11. Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World: Sacraments and Or- 
thodoxy (New York: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, revised cd., 1973), p. 28. 

12. Cf. the words of St. Irenaeus: "The all-powerful Word of God, who 
never fails in justice, acted justly even in dealing with the Spirit of Rebellion. 
For it was by persuasion, not by force, that He redeemed His own 
property ... for thus it behoved God to achieve His purpose: with the result 
that justice was not infringed, and God's original handiwork was saved from 
perishing" (Against Heresies, v.i.l). St. Augustine adds: "Christ demonstrated 
justice by his death, he promised power by his resurrection. What could be 
more just than to go as far as the death of the cross, for the sake of justice? 
What greater act of power than to rise from the dead, and ascend to heaven 
with the very flesh in which he was slain? First justice conquered the devil, then 
power; justice, because he had no sin and was most unjustly put to death by 
the devil; power, because he lived again after death, never to die thereafter" 
(On the Trinity, xiii.18). 

333 



13:8-10 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

8 St. John repeats what hehastoldusinv. 3-4: All who 
dwell on the Land (i.e., the apostate Israelites) will worship him. 
We must remember that the Bible speaks of worship in terms of 
both official, liturgical adoration (a "worship service") and 
everyday, practical allegiance and obedience. When faced with 
the practical choice between Caesar and their Lord, the J ews 
chose Caesar. Idolatry - worship of the creature rather than the 
Creator - is the mark of the one whose name has not been writ- 
ten from the foundation of the world in the Book of Life of the 
Lamb who has been slain. From the beginning, the wicked have 
been predestined to damnation. This is not only a necessary cor- 
relative to the Biblical doctrines of God's sovereignty and His 
unconditional election of His people (see, e.g., Acts 13:48), but 
it is explicitly taught as such in Scripture (see Prov. 16:4; Matt. 
11:25; Mark 4:11-12; J oh n 12:37-40; Rem. 9:13; 11:7-10; 1 Pet. 
2:7-8; J ude 4; Rev. 17:8, 17). God's heavenly Church Member- 
ship Roll has existed from the foundation of the world, eternal 
and immutable. From the viewpoint of God's eternal decree, 
therefore, these circumcised covenant-breakers who worship the 
Beast have never been included in the Book of Life. Those who 
seek to excommunicate the followers of the Lamb are them- 
selves locked out of the Covenant instead. 

9-10 St. John interrupts his description of the Beast's wor- 
shipers to exhort his readers to pay close attention to what he is 
going to say next: If anyone has an ear, let him hear (the proba- 
ble origin of this expression is a reference to the "circumcision," 
or boring open, of the "homeborn" slave's ear, representing COV- 
enantal death and resurrection, rebirth, and renewed obedience 
to the word of the master; see Ex. 21:5-6; Deut. 15:16-17; Ps. 
40:6-8). 13 He then declares the doom of the followers of the 
Beast, of those who dwell on the Land: If anyone is destined for 
captivity, to captivity he goes; if anyone kills with the sword, 
with the sword he must be killed. St. John is quoting loosely 
from Jeremiah 15:2, a verse that occurs in an extended passage 
detailing God's rejection of J erusalem. J eremiah is instructed 
not to pray for the nation, because they have been destined for 
destruction (Jer. 14:10-12); in fact, even if those great interces- 



13. For an extensive study of the circumcision of the ear, see James B. Jor- 
dan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: 
Institute for Christian Economics, 1985), pp. 77-84. 

334 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:9-10 

sors Moses (cf. Ex. 32:11-14; Num. 14:13-24) and Samuel (cf. 1 
Sam. 7:5-9; 12:9-15) were to pray for them, God says He will not 
hear (Jer. 15:1). There will be no place to hide from the judg- 
ment, and when the terrified people asked, "Where shall we 
go?" Jeremiah was to answer: 

Those destined for death, to death; 
And those destined for the sword, to the sword; 
And those destined for famine, to famine; 
And those destined for captivity, to captivity. 
(Jer.l5:2;cf. 42:11, in context) 

In language reminiscent of Jesus' foreboding words to the 
women of J erusalem (Luke 23:28-31), Jeremiah goes on to 
describe the coming destruction of the Land (Jer. 15:5-9). Re- 
minding his readers of this passage and its historical fulfillment 
in the destruction of Jerusalem and the first Temple by the Baby- 
lonians (587 B.C.), St. J ohn hammers home the certainty of the 
coming judgment on the apostate J ews of the first century, those 
who are in league with the Beast in persecuting the saints. The 
wicked cannot escape: They have been destined for captivity 
and the sword. 

Confidence in God's government is of the essence of the 
patient faith to which God's people are called. We are to place 
our trust not in man, not in the evil machinations of diabolical 
conspirators, but in God, who is ruling the world for His glory. 
His judgment will surely come. The patient expectation of this is 
the perseverance and the faith of the saints. 

The Beast from the Land (13:11-18) 

11 And I saw another Beast coming up from the Land; and he 
had two horns like a Lamb, and he spoke as a Dragon. 

12 And he exercises all the authority of the First Beast in his 
presence. And he makes the Land and those who dwell in it 
to worship the First Beast, whose fatal wound was healed. 

13 And he performs great signs, so that he even makes fire 
come down out of heaven to the Land in the presence of 
men. 

14 And he deceives those who dwell in the Land because of the 
signs which it was given him to perform in the presence of 
the Beast, telling those who dwell in the Land to make an 

335 



13:11 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Image to the Beast who has the wound of the sword and has 
come to life. 

15 And there was given to him to give breath to the Image of 
the Beast, that the Image of the Beast might even speak and 
cause as many as do not worship the Image of the Beast to 
be killed. 

16 And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and 
the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark 
on their right hand, or on their forehead, 

17 and that no one should be able to buy or to sell, except the 
one who has the mark, either the name of the Beast or the 
number of his name. 

18 Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate 
the number of the Beast, for the number is that of a man; 
and his number is 666. 

11 J ust as the Beast from the sea was in the Image of the 
Dragon, so we see another creature who is in the Image of the 
Beast. St. J ohn saw this one coming up from the Land, arising 
from within Israel itself. In 16:13 and 19:20, we are told the iden- 
tity of this Land Beast. He is the False Prophet, representing 
what Jesus had foretold would take place in Israel's last days: 
"Many will come in My name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and will 
mislead many. . . . Many false prophets will arise, and will mis- 
lead many" (Matt. 24:5, 11). The rise of the false prophets paral- 
leled that of the antichrists; but whereas the antichrists had 
apostatized into J udaism from within the Church, the false 
prophets were J ewish religious leaders who sought to seduce 
Christians from the outside. As Cornells Vanderwaal has noted, 
"In Scripture, false prophecy appears only within the covenant 
context"; 14 it is the imitation of true prophecy, and operates in 
relation to the Covenant people. Moses had warned that false 
prophets would arise from among the Covenant people, per- 
forming signs and wonders (Deut. 13:1-5). 

It is important to remember that J udaism is not Old Testa- 
ment religion at all; rather, it is a rejection of the Biblical faith 
altogether in favor of the Pharisaical, Talmudic heresy. Like 
Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, the Unification Church, and 



14. Cornells Vanderwaal, Search the Scriptures, Vol. 10: Hebrews-Revelation 
(St. Catherine, Ontario: Paideia Press, 1979), p. 89; cf. p. 100. 

336 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:12 

other cults, it claims to be based on the Bible; but its actual au- 
thority comes from the traditions of men. J esus was quite clear: 
J udaism denies Christ precisely because it denies Moses (J ohn 
5:45-47). Orthodox Christianity alone is the true continuation 
and fulfillment of Old Testament religion (see Matt. 5:17-20; 
15:1-9; Mark 7:1-13; Luke 16:29-31; J ohn 8:42-47). 

The J ewish false prophets had the appearance of a Lamb, as 
Jesus had warned: "Beware of the false prophets, who come to 
you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly are ravening wolves" 
(Matt. 7:15). This is a reference not only to the false prophet's 
disguise as a member of God's flock, but to his specifically mes- 
sianic pretensions. In reality, he was a wolf, a Beast, who spoke 
as a Dragon. How does the Dragon speak? He uses deceptive, 
subtle, seductive speech to draw God's people away from the 
faith and into a trap (Gen. 3:1-6, 13; 2 Cor. 11:3; Rev. 12:9); fur- 
thermore, he is a liar, a slanderer, and a blasphemer (J ohn 8:44; 
Rev. 12:10). The Book of Acts records numerous examples of 
Draconian false witness by the J ews against Christians, a major 
problem for the early Church (Acts 6:9-15; 13:10; 14:2-5; 17:5-8; 
18:6, 12-13; 19:9; 21:27-36; 24:1-9; 25:2-3, 7). 

12 The J ewish leaders, symbolized by this Beast from the 
Land, joined forces with the Beast of Rome in an attempt to 
destroy the Church (Acts 4:24-28; 12:1-3; 13:8; 14:5; 17:5-8; 
18:12-13;21:ll;24:l-9;25:2-3, 9, 24). Thus the Land Beast exer- 
cises all the authority of the First Beast: "As the first beast is the 
agent of the dragon, so the second beast is the agent of the first 
beast. 'All the authority' makes the second beast the complete 
agent of the first ."1 5 Apostate Judaism became completely sub- 
servient to the Roman State. This is emphasized by St. John's 
statement (repeated in v. 14) that the False Prophet exercised the 
Beast's authority in his presence. This is in direct contrast to the 
function of the true prophet, who stood "before [the face of] the 
Lord," in God's presence, under His authority and blessing (1 
Sam. 1:22; 2:18; 1 Kings 17:1; cf. Num. 6:24-26; Hos. 6:2; Jonah 
1:3, 10), just as the seven Trumpet-angels are said to "stand be- 
fore God" (8:2). The prophet was privileged to enter God's 



15. R. C. H. Lenski, The Interpretation of St. John's Revelation (Minnea- 
polis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1943, 1963), p. 404. 

337 



13:13-14 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

throneroom in the Glory-Cloud as a member of the heavenly 
council, where the divine policy was formulated (cf. Ex. 33:8-11; 
1 Kings 22:19-23; Jer. 23 :18;Ezek. 1, 10; Amos 3 :7;this is also in- 
dicated in the fact that prophets are called angels: 2 Chron. 
36:15-16; Hag. 1:13; Mai. 3:1). 16 "The true prophet lives in the 
presence of God, taking his orders from Him and doing His 
pleasure; the False Prophet stands before the Beast, whose in- 
terpreter and servant he is." 17 That such a thing could ever be 
said of the religious leadership of Israel, the people of the Cove- 
nant, shows how far they had fallen from the faith of their 
fathers. They led Israel in worship of the Emperor, making the 
Land and those who dwell in it to worship the First Beast, 
whose fatal wound was healed (a counterfeit Resurrection of a 
counterfeit Son). Interestingly, it is the resurrection of the Beast 
that is given (here and in verse 14) as the reason for worship - 
just as Christian worship is ultimately founded on the Resurrec- 
tion of Christ as the proof of His Messianic character and office 
(1 Cor. 15). The counterfeit resurrection of Rome served as 
Israel's false Testimony, their "proof that Christ was not the 
Messiah. 

13-14 The False Prophet also performed great miracles in 
the service of the Empire: Unlike the powerless false prophets of 
Baal, he even makes fire come down out of heaven to the earth; 
thus this false Elijah deceives those who dwell on the Land. 
Jesus had warned that "false Christs and false prophets will arise 
and will show great signs and wonders, so as to mislead, if possi- 
ble, the very elect" (Matt. 24:24), and this was fulfilled numer- 
ous times as the period of Israel's "Last Days" progressed to its 
climax. The Book of Acts records several instances of miracle- 
working J ewish false prophets who came into conflict with the 
Church (cf. Acts 8:9-24) and worked under Roman officials (cf. 
Acts 13:6-11); as J esus had foretold (Matt. 7:22-23), some of 
them even used His name in their incantations (Acts 19:13-16). 
In imitation of the Biblical prophets, who called down God's 



16. The most detailed exposition of this is in Meredith G. Kline, Images of 
theSpirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980), pp. 57-96. 

17. Henry Barclay Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
Kregel Publications, third ed. [1911] 1977), p. 169. 

338 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:13-14 

fiery wrath against apostates and lawbreakers (Lev.l0:l-2; 
Num. 16:28-35; IKingsl8:36-40; 2Kingsl:9-16; Amos 1:3-2:5; 
Rev. 11:5), the J ewish leaders appeared to exercise God's judg 
ment against the Church, excommunicating Christians from the 
synagogues and persecuting them to the point of death. Again 
St. J ohn underscores the apostate condition of these J ewish 
prophets, by observing that they perform their wonders in the 
presence of men and in the presence of the Beast rather than 
"before the Throne and before the Lamb" (7:9; cf. 3:5;4:10;5:8; 
7:11, 15; 8:2;11:4, 16; 14:3, 10; 15:4). 

The perversity of Israel's leadership is such that they encour- 
age those who dwell on the Land - the Jewish people - to make 
an Image to the Beast, as Nebuchadnezzar had erected an image 
to himself (Dan. 3). Before we can make a full identification of 
this Image it will be necessary to examine the religious back- 
ground and context in which it is set. The depth of Israel's apos- 
tasy must first of all be seen in their rejection of the Lord Jesus , 
Christ, the true God and Savior, in favor of Caesar. St. John re- 
veals this in its true light as idolatry (cf. 9:20). It is not necessary 
to suppose that the Jews literally bowed down to a graven im- 
age; the point is that they were worshiping and serving an alien 
god. 

Some would object that the Jews were never guilty of "idol- 
atry" after the Exile. In answer, we repeat again Herbert 
Schlossberg's excellent summary of the essence of idolatry: 
"Idolatry in its larger meaning is properly understood as any 
substitution of what is created for the creator. People may wor- 
ship nature, money, mankind, power, history, or social and pol- 
itical systems instead of the God who created them all. The New 
Testament writers, in particular, recognized that the relationship 
need not be explicitly one of cultic worship; a man can place 
anyone or anything at the top of his pyramid of values, and that 
is ultimately what he serves. The ultimacy of that service pro- 
foundly affects the way he lives." 18 Moreover, it is clear that the 
postexilic prophets did consider the J ews of their own day to be 
idolaters (cf. Zech. 13:1-3; Mai. 3:5-7). 

The idolatrous character of apostate Israel is assumed 



18. Herbert Schlossberg, Idols for Destruction: Christian Faith and its Con- 
frontation with American Society (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1983), p. 6. 

339 



13:13-14 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

throughout the message of the New Testament. The Apostle 
Paul specifically accuses the Jews of lawlessness and apostasy in 
Remans 2. In verses 21-22, he says: "You, therefore, who teach 
another, do you not teach yourself? You that preach that one 
should not steal, do you steal? You who say that one should not 
commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You whoabhor 
idols, do you rob temples?" Clearly, St. Paul is charging apos- 
tate Israel with committing idolatry (or its equivalent). It is cru- 
cial to note that all the accusations in Remans 2 refer to Israel as 
a whole; obviously, if they applied only to a select few his argu- 
ment would have no force. (Since he also accuses them of com- 
mitting adultery, it is at least possible that he has in mind "relig- 
ious" adultery against their true Husband, Jesus Christ). In gen- 
eral, commentators have supposed the charge of idolatry to 
mean either that the Jews were guilty of robbing from heathen 
temples (e.g., St. Chrysostom, Henry Afford, John Murray; cf. 
Acts 19:37, which indicates that the Jews may have been consid- 
ered liable to this offense), or that they were committing "sacri- 
lege" in a more general sense, by their impiety, irreverence, and 
unbelief (e.g., John Calvin, Charles Hedge; cf. 1 Samuel 15:23; 
Neh. 13:4-12; Mai. 1:6-14; 3:8-9;Col. 3:5). What is not generally 
noticed is that the whole list of crimes in Remans 2:20-23 is 
taken from Malachi 2-3, indicating that the charge of "robbing 
temples" (and thus of idolatry) is related to the Israelites' failure 
to tithe, their refusal to honor Him as God (cf. Matt. 15:7-9). 
God says through Malachi: 

From the days of your fathers you have turned aside from 
My statutes, and have not kept them. Return to Me, and I will 
return to you, says the Lord of hosts. But you say, "How shall 
we return?" Will a man rob God? Yet you are robbing Me! But 
you say, "How are we robbing Thee?" In tithes and offerings! 
You are cursed with a curse, for you are robbing Me, the whole 
nation of you! (Mai. 3:7-9) 

A good part of the Westminster Larger Catechism's defini- 
tion of idolatry (virtually every word of which is abundantly 
referenced to Scripture) is applicable to the religious character 
of Israel during the Last Days: 'The sins forbidden in the sec- 
ond commandment are, all devising, counseling, commanding, 
using, and any wise approving, any religious worship not insti- 

340 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:15-17 

tuted by God Himself; tolerating a false religion; ... all super- 
stitious devices, corrupting the worship of God, adding to it, or 
taking from it, whether invented and taken up of ourselves, or 
received by tradition from others, though under the title of an- 
tiquity, custom, devotion, good intent, or any other pretense 
whatsoever; simony; sacrilege; all neglect, contempt, hindering, 
and opposing the worship and ordinances which God bath ap- 
pointed" (cf. Matt. 15:3-9; Acts 13:45; l Thess. 2:15-16).19 The 
essential point for our purpose is simply that St. Paul is accusing 
the J ewish people of some sort of idolatry. It is certainly a broad 
enough term to cover their rejection of J esus Christ. 

15-17 The extent of the False Prophet's demonic power is 
such that he is able to give breath (or spirit) to the Image of the 
Beast, that the Image of the Beast might even speak. While 
some have argued that this refers to some trick of machinery or 
ventriloquism (and thus a seeming refutation of Psalm 
135:15-16: "The idols of the nations . . . have mouths, but they 
do not speak"), it is more likely that the passage as a whole is in- 
tended to convey the idea of an apostate J ewish attempt to re- 
create the world. In the beginning, when God created the earth, 
He gave breath/Spirit to His Image and placed him in His 
garden-temple (Gen. 2:7-8); and the first thing we see the Image 
doing is speaking, naming and defining the creation in terms of 
God's mandate (Gen. 2:19-20). 

The Beast's spirit-inspired Image itself is able to cause as 
many as do not worship the Image of the Beast to be killed. The 
Jewish synagogues enforced submission to the Emperor. In- 
deed, their leaders' charge against Christ Himself was that He 
was a rival to the all-embracing authority of Caesar (J ohn 
19:12-15). Similarly, they organized economic boycotts against 
those who refused to submit to Caesar as Lord, the leaders of 
the synagogues "forbidding all dealings with the excommuni- 
cate," 20 and going so far as to put them to death. 

And he causes all, (note the six categories) the small and the 



19. The Confession of Faith (Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, 1970), 
pp. 193ff. ' 

20. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (London: Oxford 
University Press, 1964), p. 157. 

341 



13:15-17 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the 
slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand, or on their fore- 
head, and he provides that no one should be able to buy or to 
sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the 
Beast or the number of his name. The Book of Acts is studded 
with incidents of organized J ewish persecution of the Church 
(Acts 4:1-3, 15-18; 5:17-18, 27-33, 40; 6:8-15; 7:51-60; 9:23, 29; 
13:45-50; 14:2-5; 17:5-8, 13; 18:17; 20:3; 22:22-23; 23:12, 20-21; 
24:27; 26:21; 28:17-29; cf. 1 Thess. 2:14-16). All of this ultimately 
served the interests of Caesar against Christ and the Church; 
and the "mark of the Beast," of course, is the Satanic parody of 
the "seal of God" on the foreheads and hands of the righteous 
(3:12; 7:2-4; 14:1), the mark of wholehearted obedience to the 
Law in thought and deed (Deut. 6:6-8), the mark of blessing and 
protection (Ezek. 9:4-6), the sign that one is HOLY TO THE 
LORD (cf. Ex. 28:36). Israel has rejected Christ, and is 
"marked" with the seal of Rome's total lordship; she has given 
her allegiance to Caesar, and is obedient to his rule and law. 
Israel chose to be saved by the pagan state, and persecuted those 
who sought salvation in Christ. 

The New Testament gives abundant testimony of this fact. 
The Jewish hierarchy was involved in a massive, organized at- 
tempt to destroy the Church by both deceit and persecution. In 
pursuit of this diabolical goal, they united in a conspiracy with 
the Roman government against Christianity. Some of them were 
able to perform miracles in the service of Satan. All this is ex- 
actly what is told us of the Beast from the Land. The False 
Prophet of Revelation represents none other than the leadership 
of apostate Israel, who rejected Christ and worshiped the Beast. 

There is an interesting reversal of imagery in the text. The 
Book of Job has prepared us for St. John's prophecy, for it too 
tells us of a Land Beast {Behemoth, J ob 40:15-24) and a Sea 
Beast (Leviathan, Job 41:1-34). In the Greek Old Testament 
which the early Church used, the Hebrew word Behemoth is 
translated Therion, the same word St. J ohn uses for Beast; and 
Leviathan is translated Drakon (Dragon). But St. J ohn's visions 
expand on J ob's descriptions of these dinosaurs, and the order 
of their appearance is reversed. J ob first saw the Behemoth (J ob 
40), then Leviathan (Job 41), and finally God (Job 42). In Reve- 
lation, St. J ohn shows us the demonic reverse of this pattern: 

342 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:15-17 

First we see Satan as the Dragon, the Leviathan; then comes the 
Sea Beast, who is in the Dragon's image; finally, trailing behind 
and serving them, comes the Land Beast, in the image of the Sea 
Beast, bringing along yet another Image of the Beast. By listing 
the Beasts in reverse order, St. J ohn underscores his point: 
Israel, which was to have been a kingdom of priests to the na- 
tions of the world, has surrendered her position of priority to 
Leviathan and the Beast. Instead of placing a godly imprint 
upon every culture and society, Israel has been remade into the 
image of the pagan, antichristian State, becoming its prophet. 
Abraham's children have become the seed of the Serpent. 

During three years of ministry in Ephesus, the Apostle Paul 
continually suffered persecution because of "the plots of the 
J ews" (Act 20:19); in describing his conflicts with them, he called 
them "wild beasts" (1 Cor. 15:32). The J ewish Beast was the early 
Church's most deceptive and dangerous enemy. St. Paul stren- 
uously warned the Church about J udaizers who propagated 
"J ewish myths": 'They profess to know God, but by their deeds 
they deny Him, being detestable and disobedient, and worthless 
for any good deed" (Tit. 1:14, 16). 

We are now in a position to attempt a more precise identifi- 
cation of the Image of the Beast, which is a continuation of the 
Satanic counterfeit, the demonic reversal of God's order. J ust as 
the Son of God is the Image of the Father (J ohn 1 :18;Col.l:15), 
so the Church has been redemptively re-created as the Image of 
the Son (Rem. 8:29; Eph. 4:24;Col. 3:10). The vision of the 
prophetic, priestly, and dominical Church seen by St. J ohn par- 
allels that of the Lord Jesus Christ: Like her Lord, she is robed 
in glorious light (cf. 1:13-16; 10:1; 12:1; 19:6-8; 21:9-22:5). Assist- 
ing the Son in His work throughout Revelation are the Seven 
Stars/Angels of the Presence (8:2), led by the Holy Spirit (the 
Seven Spirits, connected with the angels in 3:1). The divine 
order is thus: 

Father 

Son (Image of the Father) 

Angels/Bishops 

Church (image of the Son) 

The Satanic parody of this is: 

343 



13:18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Dragon 

Beast (Image of the Dragon) 

False Prophet 

Synagogue of Satan (Image of the Beast) 

Throughout the Book of Revelation the Church speaks litur- 
gically, and the angels then act in history to bind and loose by 
Trumpet and Chalice, bringing judgment on the disobedient; 
similarly, the Synagogue "speaks," and the False Prophet brings 
its false judgments upon those who defy its authority. The 
Church has been resurrected, brought to life by the very Spirit/ 
Breath of God (11:11; cf. Gen. 2:7; J ohn 20:22); the Synagogue 
of Satan was animated by a spirit/breath as well (13:15). And, 
just as the Angel of God marked the foreheads of the righteous 
for protection (7:3), so the Beast's "angel" stamped the wicked 
with its own branding mark of evil. The leaders of Israel worked 
to enforce worship, not of the true God, as in the Christian 
churches, but of the Synagogue itself — the Image of the Beast. 

18 It was by now clear to St. J ohn's readers that the Sea 
Beast was the Roman Empire. St. John now provides his readers 
with an identification of the Beast in a very different form: Here 
is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number 
of the Beast, for the number is that of a man; and his number is 
666. As we shall see, 666 (literally, xfc') 21 is the numerical value 
of the name Nero Caesar. "While this is a convenient (and, so 
far as it goes, perfectly correct) solution, it also poses several 
problems. If the Beast is to be identified with the Roman Empire 



21. I n N ew Testament times the obsolete letter <; (stigma, which made the 
sound st) was used for the numeral 6; see A. T. Robertson and W. Hersey 
Davis, A New Short Grammar of the Greek Testament (New York: Harper& 
Brothers, 1931, 1933) p. 109. 

22. It is sometimes objected that, by using various systems of computation, 
it is possible to give practically anyone's name the value of 666; thus, interpret- 
ers have identified the Beast with the Pope, Martin Luther, Napoleon, Adolf 
Hitler, and Henry Kissinger (among a host of others). The point should be un- 
derstood, however, that "not any possible solution of the name, but rather a 
relevant solution, is required. Having already shown that the Roman Empire is 
the Beast described in verses 1-8 of this chapter, we naturally look for some 
name that gives specific designation of that power" (Milton Terry, Biblical 
Apocalyptic, p. 401). 

344 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:18 

as a whole, rather than with Nero alone, does this not change 
the "number of the Beast" when another Caesar is on the 
throne? Moreover, is this not merely an example of "newspaper 
exegesis" - using first-century newspapers? 23 The answer is that 
Nero's name is not the primary reference of 666; rather, the 
number of the Beast is based on several strands of Biblical data 
which point ultimately to the Roman Empire. The name Nero 
Caesar hy no means exhausts the significance of the riddle. The 
Bible itself gives us enough information to allow us to identify 
Rome as the Beast, the fulfillment of 666. 

We begin with the simple number 6, which is associated with 
both Beast and Man from the beginning, since they were both 
created on the sixth day of the week (Gen. 1:24-31). Six days out 
of seven are given to man and beast for labor (Ex. 20:8-11); the 
Hebrew slave was in bondage for six years before his release in 
the seventh year (Ex. 21:2); six cities of refuge were appointed 
for the accidental slaying of a man (Num. 35:9-15). Six: is thus 
the number of Man, i.e. a human number. Lenski explains: 
"J ohn writes the number not in words but in Greek letters: x' = 
600, I' = 60, <;' = 6, thus 666. This is the number 6, plus its multi- 
ple by 10, namely 60, again plus its multiple by lOx 10 (intensi- 
fied completeness), namely 600 - thus 666, three times falling 
short of the divine 7. In other words, not 111, but competing 
with 777, seeking to obliterate 777, but doing so abortively, its 
failure being as complete as was its expansion by puffing itself 
up from 6 to 666."2'Six is thus the number Man was born with, 
the number of his creation; the repetition of the number reveals 
Man in opposition to God, trying to increase his number, at- 
tempting to transcend his creaturehood. But, try as he might, he 
can be nothing more than a six, or a series of sixes. 

And this is exactly what we see in Scripture, as apostate man 
attempts to deify himself. Goliath, the ancient enemy of God's 



23. There is, of course, some justification for a first-century "newspaper ex- 
egesis," for the Book of Revelation itself leads us to expect a first-century ful- 
fillment of its prophecies. We should look - carefully - for historical events in 
the first century which correspond to the apocalyptic visions. This does not ne- 
cessarily lend itself to undue speculation, for it is simply taking John's own 
statements about his book seriously. He said it would be fulfilled "shortly." 

24. R. C. H. Lenski, The Interpretation of St. John's Revelation (Minnea- 
polis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1943, 1963),pp.411f. 

345 



13:18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

people, is as tall as "six cubits and a span" (1 Sam. 17:4) — i.e., 
six, plus a hand grasping for more; the head of his spear weighs 
600 shekels of iron. (Goliath is, on several counts, a Beast; as 
the seed of the Dragon, he wears scale-armor, 1 Sam. 17:5; but 
the Seed of the Woman destroys him by inflicting a head- 
wound, 1 Sam. 17:49-51.) Another striking example of this pat- 
tern takes place when King Nebuchadnezzar erects an image of 
himself measuring 60 cubits high and 6 cubits across (Dan. 
3 :1). 25 The impact of this is magnified when we consider that the 
numerical value of the Hebrew letters 26 in Daniel 3 : 1 (which 
describes Nebuchadnezzar's image) add up to 4,683 - which is 7 
times 666 (4,662), plus 21, the triangular of 6 (triangulation will 
be explained presently). 

A brief digression here will serve to place this point in its 
larger symbolic framework, for- in contrast to the multiplied 
sixes of Nebuchadnezzar's image — the names of Daniel and his 
three friends who refused to worship the idol add up to 888 in 
Hebrew. 27 This is also the number of Jesus in Greek. 28 The Fall 
of man occurred on the seventh day of creation (man's first full 



25. St. Irenaeus sees 666 as a combination of Noah's age at the Flood (600) 
— symbolizing "all the commixture of wickedness which took place previous to 
the deluge" - with the 60+6 of Nebuchadnezzar's image, symbolizing "every 
error of devised idols since the flood, together with the slaying of the prophets 
and the cutting off of the just." Against Heresies, in Alexander Roberts and 
James Donaldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. 
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1973 reprint), Vol. 1, p. 558. 

26. In Hebrew (as in most ancient languages), the alphabet served double 
duty: each letter was also a numeral. Thus any given word or group of words 
had a numerical value, which could be computed simply by adding up the 
numerals. The language-system of the West avoids this by using the Roman 
alphabet for its letters and the Arabic alphabet for its numerals. It is thus diffi- 
cult and artificial for us to imagine going back and forth between the letter-use 
and numeral-use of the characters in our language, but for the ancients it was 
quite natural. In all probability, they did not need to engage in any great men- 
tal shifts back and forth, but simply saw and comprehended both aspects at 
once. 

27. See Ernest L. Martin, The Original Bible Restored (Pasadena, CA: 
Foundation for Biblical Research, 1984), p. 110. In his vision of thegreat image 
which represented the heathen empires leading up to Christ's kingdom, 
Nebuchadnezzar was the "head of gold" (Dan. 2:37-38); Martin has pointed 
out that 666 years after Nebuchadnezzar inaugurated his reign (604 B.C.), 
Israel's last sabbatical cycle began (Autumn, a.d. 63), which ended in the 
destruction of J erusalem and the Temple in the Autumn of 70. 

28. 1 hzoyz (I = 10 + H = 8 + Z = 200 + O = 70 + Y = 400 + X = 200) = 888. 

346 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:18 

day of life); J esus Christ, the Second Adam, spent the seventh 
day in the grave, to pay for Adam's sin. His Resurrection took 
place on the eighth day, which becomes the replacement Sab- 
bath for the New Creation .29 Austin Fairer comments: "J esus 
rose on the third day, being the eighth of that week: he is the 
Resurrection and the Life. For eight signifying resurrection, see 
1 Peter 3:20-21, and 2 Peter 2:5. But the third day on which 
Jesus rose is third from that sixth day (Friday) on which Anti- 
christ had his apparent triumph; so if Christ has a name valuing 
888, Antichrist should have a name valuing 666. " 30 

Farrer expands on this point: "Why should Antichrist be so 
emphatically six! The whole arrangement of the Apocalypse ex- 
plains this. The divine work with which it deals is a work of 
judgment: it is judgment which has the sixfold pattern of the 
working-days, and always on the sixth day there is the culmina- 
tion of judgment. 31 On the sixth day of the week, and at the 
sixth hour, says St. John [John 19:13-22; Rev. 13:16-14: 1], the 
kingdoms of Christ and Antichrist looked one another in the 
face in Pilate's court, and the adherents of the false prophet 
(Caiphas) firmly wrote on their foreheads the mark of the Beast, 
when they said, 'We have no king but Caesar.' Presently they 
saw the Lamb uplifted with his true Name over his head, 'King 
of the J ews': and for all they could do, they could not get it erased: 
What I have written,' said Pilate, 'I have written.' Christ's Friday 
victory is the supreme manifestation also of Antichrist ," 32 

There is an interesting mathematical property of the number 
666, which would not have escaped St. John's readers: 666 is the 
triangular of the square of 6. That is, the square of 6 (6x 6) is 
36. The triangular of 36 is 666. Triangulation is a method of 
computation that was popular in the ancient world, and very fa- 
miliar to people in the first century, but it has been largely for- 
gotten in our day. It works like this: 



29. SeeJ ames B. J ordan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Ex- 
odus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), p. 164. 

30. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (London: Oxford 
University press, 1964), p. 156; Farrer is, of course, referring to the Beast by 
the common (but technically inaccurate) term Antichrist, which is really the 
designation given by St. John to apostates from the Christian faith. 

31. Cf. Gen. 1:31; Rev. 6:12-17; 9:13-21. 

32. Farrer, A Rebirth of Images, p. 259. 

347 



13:18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

•••••• • 

•••••• •• 

•••••• ••• 

•••••• •••• 

•••••• ••••• 

•••••• •••••• 

These diagrams, both of which have six units on each side, 
show that 36 is the square of 6, while 21 is the triangular of 6. If 
we extend the triangle one more line, we would get the triangu- 
lar of seven (28); another line would give us the triangular of 
eight (36). Extending it all the way up to 36 lines results in the 
number 666.33 The number of the Beast, therefore, is a full 
"exposition" of the number of Man. 

But there is more. If we were to strip off the outer edge of fif- 
teen stars in the triangle above, we would be left with a "triangle 
within a triangle," made up of six stars; one could therefore say 
that the triangular 21 is the "filling in," or fulfillment, of 15 (the 
number of units in the outer triangle, or periphery). 

it 

itit 
ititit 

#••••&■ 
it it it it it it 

Now, the triangular 666 contains 12 of these triangles, one 
inside the other, with the outermost triangle made up of 105 
units; thus the triangular 666 is the "fulfillment" of 105. This 
brings us to the interesting part, for the factors of 105 are 
30x 3 V2. Three and a half years of twelve months in each year 
and thirty days in each month equals the twelve hundred and 
sixty days, the period of the Beast's triumph. 

Austin Farrer explains: "666, therefore, is a 12-fold triangle 
with a periphery of 30x 3 1/2. . . . The coincidence between this 
reckoning and the factors of the 666 triangle is no mere acci- 
dent. St. John's reckoning of the period is artificial, devised for 
the sake of conformity with the factors of the 666 triangle. 
There neither is nor was any calendar in which 3 Vi years are 3 Vi 



33. Incidentally, the easy way to figure out the triangular of any number 
is to multiply it by the next higher number, then divide by two; thus 



36x37- 666- 



348 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:18 

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itititififififitititititififififitifititifitifititititifififitifitititit 

times twelve months of thirty dayseach. 34 The purpose of the 
artificial reckoning is to exhibit the Beast's fatally limited reign 
as a function of his number." 35 

F. W. Farrar described how thefirstreaders ofthe Revelation 
would thus have regarded the mysterious 666 (*!«'): "Thevery 
look of it was awful. The first letter was the initial letter of the 
name of Christ. The last letter was the first double-letter (st) of 
the Cross (stauros) .Betweenthetwo theSerpentstood confessed 
with its writhing sign and hissing sound. The whole formed a triple 
repetition of6, the essential number of toil and imperfection; 



34. Farrer's note atthis point reads:" A solar calendar requires that about 
every other month shall be of 31 days, not 30. A lunar calendar must have 
everyothermonth of29daysand an intercalary month alittle more frequently 
than every third year. So by lunar reckoning, 3 Vi years is either about 1,270, or 
about 1,300 days: or, if we neglect intercalation entirely, it is about 1,240 days. 
In no case is it 1,260 days." 

35. Farrer,^4 Rebirth of Images, -pp. 259f. 

349 



13:18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

and this numerical symbol of the Antichrist, 666, stood in terri- 
ble opposition to 888 - the three perfect 8's of the name of 
Jesus." 36 

More than all this, the number 666 is explicitly mentioned in 
the books of the Kings and the Chronicles, from which, as we 
have seen, St. J ohn takes many of his symbolic numbers (see 
comments on 4:4). These inspired historical writings tell us that 
Solomon (a Biblical type of both Christ and the Beast) received 
666 talents of gold in one year, at the height of his power and 
glory (1 Kings 10:14; 2 Chron. 9:13). That number marks both 
the high point of his reign and the beginning of his downfall; 
from then on, everything goes downhill into apostasy. One by 
one, Solomon breaks the three laws of godly kingship recorded 
in Deuteronomy 17:16-17: the law against multiplying gold (1 
Kings 10:14-25); the law against multiplying horses (1 Kings 
10:26-29); and the law against multiplying wives (1 Kings 11:1-8). 
For the Hebrews, 666 was a fearful sign of apostasy, the mark of 
both a king and a kingdom in the Dragon's image. 

As we have already noted, the ancient languages used each 
letter of the alphabet as a numeral as well; thus, the "number" 
of anyone's name could be computed by simply adding up the 
numerical value of its letters. Clearly, St. J ohn expected that his 
contemporary readers were capable of using this method to dis- 
cover the Beast's name — thus indicating, again, the contempor- 
ary message of Revelation; he did not expect them to figure out 
the name of some 20th-century official in a foreign government. 
At the same time, however, he tells them that it will not be as 
easy as they might think: it will require someone "who has un- 
derstanding." For St. J ohn did not give a number that could be 
worked out in Greek, which is what a Roman official scanning 
Revelation for subversive content would expect. The unex- 
pected element in the computation was that it had to be worked 
out in Hebrew, a language that at least some members of the 
churches would know. His readers would have guessed by now 
that he was speaking of Nero, and those who understood 
Hebrew probably grasped it instantly. The numerical values of 
the Hebrew letters in Neron Kesar (Nero Caesar) are: 



36. F,W. Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity (Chicago and New York: 
Belford, Clarke& Co., 1882), p. 539. 

350 



LEVIATHAN AND BEHEMOTH 13:18 

3 = 50 "V200 1=6 3 = 50 p =100 D=60 *|=200 

thus: 

npp. i'np. =666 

As I mentioned earlier, the point is not that Nero's name is 
the primary identification of 666. The point is, instead, what the 
number meant to the churches. St. J ohn's Biblically informed 
readers will have already recognized many clear indications of 
the Beast's identity as Rome (indeed, they already knew this 
from reading the Book of Daniel). Now Nero has arrived on the 
scene as the first great persecutor of the Church, the embodi- 
ment of the "666-ness" of the Empire, and - Lo and behold! - 
his very name spells out 666. 37 

It is significant that "all the earliest Christian writers on the 
Apocalypse, from Irenaeus down to Victorious of Pettau and 
Commodian in the fourth, and Andreas in the fifth, and St. 
Beatus in the eighth century, connect Nero, or some Roman em- 
peror, with the Apocalyptic Beast ," 38 There should be no rea- 
sonable doubt about this identification. St. J ohn was writing to 
first-century Christians, warning them of things that were "shortly" 
to take place. They were engaged in the most crucial battle of his- 



37. It is charged by some that Neron Kesar is merely a convenient "misspell- 
ing" of Nero's name in Hebrew. This objection overlooks the fact that before 
the modern introduction of dictionaries the world was simply not as concerned 
as we are about uniformity in the spelling of names. Alternate spellings were 
common (e.g. "Joram" and "Jehoram" in the Old Testament), especially in the 
transliteration of words into a foreign tongue. But the allegation of misspell- 
ing is wholly wrong anyway. The form Neron Kesar (I) is the linguistically 
"correct" Hebrew form, (2) is the form found in the Talmud and other rabbin- 
ical writings, and (3) was used by Hebrews in the first century, as archaeologi- 
cal evidence has shown. As F. W. Farrar observed, "the Jewish Christian would 
have tried the name as he thought of the name-that is in Hebrew letters. And 
the moment he did this the secret stood revealed. No Jew ever thought of Nero 
except as 'Neron Kesar,' and this gives at once . . . 666" (The Early Days of 
Christianity, Chicago and New York: Belford, Clarke& Co., 1882, p. 540). Of 
some related interest is the fact that if Nero's name is written without the final 
n (i.e., the way it would occur to a Gentile to spell it in Hebrew), it yields the 
number 616 — which is exactly the variant reading in a few New Testament 
manuscripts. The most reasonable explanation for this variant is that it arose 
from the confusion over the final n. 

38. F. W. Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity (Chicago and New York: 
Belford, Clarke & Co., 1882), p. 541. See, e.g., Sulpitius Severus (a.d.363- 
420), who clearly cites Rev. 13 in his description of Nero: Sacred History, in A 
Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church 
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1973 reprint), pp. UOf. 

351 



13:18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

tory, against the Dragon and the evil Empire which he possessed. 
The purpose of the Revelation was to comfort the Church with the 
assurance that God was in control, so that even the awesome might 
of the Dragon and the Beast would not stand before the armies of 
Jesus Christ. Christ was wounded in His heel on Friday, the sixth 
day, the Day of the Beast - yet that is the day He crushed the Drag- 
on's head. At his most powerful, St. John says, the Beast is just a 
six, or a series of sixes; never a seven. His plans of world domin- 
ion will never be fulfilled, and the Church will overcome through 
her Lord Jesus, the 888, who conquered on the Eighth Day. 

TABLE OF NUMERALS IN USE 
DURTNG THE BIBLICAL PERIOD 





Hebrew 


Gre 


1 


X 


a 


2 


2 


P 


5 


} 


V 


4 


1 


d 


5 


7) 


E 


6 


) 


c 


7 


T 


i 


8 


n 


n 


9 


» 


e 


10 


♦ 


t 


20 


r> 


X 


30 


*? 


A 


40 


n 


^ 


50 


i 


V 


60 


D 


1 


70 


Y 





80 


S 


n 


90 


a 


? 
P 


100 




200 


-) 


a 


300 


w 


T 


400 


n 


V 


500 


pn 


* 


600 




X 


700 




V 


800 




<o 



352 



14 
THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 

St. J ohn has just revealed the evil triad of enemies facing the 
early Church: the Dragon, the Sea Beast, and the Land Beast. 
He has made it clear that these enemies are implacable, that the 
conflict with them will require faithfulness unto death. The 
question again naturally arises: Will the Church survive such an 
all-out attack? In this closing section of the fourth major divi- 
sion of his prophecy, therefore, J ohn again addresses these fears 
of his audience. The action of the book comes to a halt as the 
apostle gives comfort and provides reasons for confidence in the 
coming victory of the Church over all her opposition. 'The rev- 
elation of the three great foes, the dragon, the beast from the 
sea, and the beast from the land, is followed immediately by a 
sevenfold disclosure of victory and judgment in the heavens. 
The purpose of these visions and voices from heaven is obvi- 
ously to show that the powers of the heavens are mightier than 
those of the infernal serpent and his associates. The trinity of 
hostile forces, armed with many lying wonders, might seem 
from a human point of view invincible. But J ohn, like the young 
servant of Elisha when confronted with the horses and chariots 
and immense host of the king of Syria, is here admonished that 
they which are with the persecuted Church are more and mightier 
than they which make war against her (comp. 2 Kings 6:15-17)."' 

The Lamb with His Fair Army (14:1-5) 

1 And I looked, and behold, the Lamb was standing on 
Mount Zion, and with Him one hundred and forty-four 



1. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic: A Study of the Most Notable Reve- 
lations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton 
and Mains, 1898), p. 402. 

353 



14:1 PART FOUR : THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

thousand, having His name and the name of His Father 
written on their foreheads. 

2 And I heard a Voice from heaven, like the sound of many 
waters and like the sound of loud thunder, and the Voice 
which I heard was like harpists playing on their harps. 

3 And they sing a New Song before the Throne and before the 
four living creatures and the elders; and no one could learn 
the Song except the one hundred and forty-four thousand 
who had been purchased from the Land. 

4 These are the ones who have not been defiled with women, 
for they are chaste men. These are the ones who follow the 
Lamb wherever He goes. These have been purchased from 
among men as first fruits to God and to the Lamb. 

5 And no lie was found in their mouth, for they are blameless. 

1 We are back in Psalm 2 again: St. John has shown us the 
heathen raging against the Lord and against His Christ, rebel- 
ling against the authority of the Godhead; and now the Lord 
says: "But as for Me, I have installed My King upon Zion, My 
holy mountain," guaranteeing that the nations will submit to 
His all-embracing rule. In opposition to the Beasts rising from 
Sea and Land, the Lamb is standing (cf. 5:6) on Mount Zion, al- 
ready enthroned as King of kings, the Ruler of all nations. The 
Mountain-imagery of the Bible is clearly a reference to the origi- 
nal Holy Mountain, the location of the Garden of Eden (Ezek. 
28:13-14). The prophetic promises of the restoration of the 
Mountain to the earth (Isa. 2:2-4; Dan. 2:32-35, 44-45; Mic. 
4:1-4), as well as the numerous redemptive activities on moun- 
tains (Gen. 22:2; Ex. 19:16-19; 2 Chron. 3:1; Matt. 28:16-20), sig- 
nified the fulfillment and consummation of Paradise through 
the Messiah's atonement, when God's Kingdom would fill the 
earth (Isa. 11:9).2 The Lamb standing on the Mountain is a sym- 
bol of Christ's victory over all His enemies, with His people re- 
stored to Eden and fellowship with God. The fact that the 
Mountain is Zion (mentioned seven times in the New Testament: 
Matt. 21:5; John 12:15; Rem. 9:33; 11:26; Heb. 12:22; 1 Pet. 2:6) 
serves to highlight this victory, for Zion is the special "holy 
mountain" of Jerusalem, the symbol of God's presence with His 



2. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 29-32. 

354 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:2-3 

people and His victorious reign over the earth, when all king- 
doms are gathered together to serve Him in the New Covenant 
( c f . Ps. 9:1-20; 14:7; 20:1-2; 48:1-14; 69:35; 87:1-3; 99:1-9; 
102:13-22; Isa. 24:21-23; 51-52; 59:16-20; J er. 31:10-37; Zech. 
9:9-17).' 

The Lamb is thus not alone on Zion, for his people share in 
His victory. They are there with Him, the one hundred and 
forty-four thousand, the Remnant of Israel ordered for battle 
according to the thousands of her tribes (see on 7:4-8). We saw 
that the Mark of the Beast (13:16-17) was the parody of the 
divine sealing of the true Israel (7:2-8); now St. John reminds us 
of the original sealing, the mark of God's ownership and protec- 
tion of His obedient people. That the 144,000 are regarded as 
members of the Church, and not ultimately as a separate cate- 
gory of ethnic Israelites, is underscored by John's combination 
of previous imagery. We were told before that the 144,000 are 
sealed on their f oreheads (7:3), while it is all Christ's overcomes 
who have His name and the name of His Father written on their 
foreheads (3:12). The 144,000, therefore, belong to the Church, 
the army of overcomes. Yet they are also a special group: the 
Remnant-Church of the first generation. 

2-3 With his eyes on the Lamb and His army, St. John hears 
a Voice from heaven, the familiar reminder of God's presence in 
the Glory-Cloud: like the sound of many waters and like the 
sound of loud thunder, and . . . like the sound of harpists play- 
ing on their harps, the heavenly orchestra playing accompani- 
ment to the victory song of the army of saints, who sing a New 
Song before the Throne and before the four living creatures and 



3. Once we understand that the Garden of Eden was on a mountain, we can 
more easily understand the basis for the amazing agreement among the myth- 
ologies of the different cultures. All cultures originated from the dispersal at 
Mount Ararat, and later at Babel; and they took with them the memories of 
the original Paradise. Thus, in every ancient culture, there are myths of the 
dwelling-place of God on the Cosmic Mountain (e.g., Mount Olympus), and 
of man's expulsion from Paradise, and his attempts to return (e.g., the almost 
universal preoccupation with building tower-gardens, pyramids, and mounds; 
cf. the "groves" and "high places" of apostate Israel). See R. J. Rushdoony, 
The One and the Many: Studies in the Philosophy of Order and Ultimacy 
(Tyler, TX:Thoburn Press, [1971] 1978), pp. 36-53; cf. Mircea Eliade, The 
Myth of the Eternal Return: or, Cosmos and History (Princeton: Princeton 
University Press, 1954, 1971), pp. 12-17. 

355 



14:4-5 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

the elders. The New Song is, as we saw on 5:9, the new liturgy ne- 
cessitated and brought about by the new epoch in the history of 
redemption. And this liturgy, the exultant response of the re- 
deemed, belongs to the Church alone (cf. 2:17): No one could 
learn the Song except the one hundred and forty-four thousand 
who have been purchased from the Land, redeemed as slaves 
from the tyranny of the Land Beast. 

4-5 St. John gives further descriptions of the redeemed: 
These are the ones who have not been defiled with women, for 
they are chaste men. Several strands of Biblical imagery are in- 
volved in this statement. We must dispense with the idea that 
J ohn is speaking of literal celibacy by calling them "chaste men" 
(or "virgins"), as Barrington pointed out:" Virgins' here is obvi- 
ously a violent symbol for purity, just as 'eunuchs' in Matthew 
[19:12] is a violent symbol for celibacy; neither is meant to be 
taken literally. They are not men who have had no intercourse 
with women, but men who have not defiled themselves with 
women, which is quite a different idea, and is certainly not 
meant to describe marriage. "4 Virgin is frequently used in the 
Old Testament for Zion, the people of God (2 Kings 19:21; Isa. 
23:12; 37:22; Jer. 14:17; 18:13; 31:4, 21; Lam. 1:15;2:13). More 
particularly, the chastity here is a symbolic reference to the re- 
quirement of sexual abstinence by soldier-priests during holy 
war (cf. Ex. 19:15; Lev. 15:16; Deut. 20:7; 23:10-11; 1 Sam. 
21:4-5; 2 Sam. 11:8-11). In addition, the context condemns the 
"fornication" committed by the nations, in connection with the 
worship of the Beast (v. 8-10). Fornication and harlotry, 
throughout the Bible, are potent metaphors for apostasy and 
idolatry (cf. Isa. 1:21; Jer. 2:20-3:11; Ezek. 16:15-43; Rev. 2:14, 
20-22), while religious fidelity is called chastity (2 Cor. 11:2). The 
Lamb's army, gathered about Him on Mount Zion, is chaste, 
faithful to Him, and single-mindedly consecrated to the Holy 
War. 

St. John tells us further that these soldiers are the ones who 
follow the Lamb wherever He goes, the term follow being a typ- 
ical metaphor for the obedience of a disciple (Matt. 9:9; 10:38; 



4. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 

1931), p. 237. 

356 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:4-5 

16:24; Mark 9:38;10:21, 28; Luke 9:23; John 8:1210:4-5, 27; 
21:22). A precise statement of those who comprise this group, 
however, isgivenin the next phrase: These have been purchased 
from among men as first fruits to God and to the Lamb. The ex- 
pression first fruits refers essentially to a sacrifice, the offering 
up of the first harvest of the land to the Lord, claimed by Him 
as His exclusive property (Ex. 22:29; 23: 16, 19; Lev. 23:9-21; 
Deut. 18:4-5; Neh. 10:35-37; Prov. 3:9-10); these Christians have 
offered themselves up to God's service for Christ's sake. More 
than this, though, the New Testament uses first fruits to describe 
the Church of the Last Days, the "first-generation" Church 
(Rem. 16:5; 1 Cor. 16:15), especially the faithful Remnant from 
the twelve tribes of Israel (James 1:1, 18): "The confessors and 
martyrs of the apostolic Church, who overcame by reason of 
their testimony and the blood of the Lamb, are thus declared to 
be, & first fruits, a choice selection out of the innumerable com- 
pany of saints. The purpose of this Apocalypse was to give spe- 
cial encouragement to these virgin spirits. "5 

The characteristics of this group are strikingly similar to 
those of Israel when she first became God's Bride: 

I remember concerning you the fidelity of your youth, 

The love of your betrothals, 

Your following after Me in the wilderness, 

Through a land not sown. 

Israel was holy to the LoRD, 

The first of His harvest. . . . (Jer. 2:2-3; cf. v. 32) 

Finally, St. John says, no lie was found in their mouth, for 
they are blameless. It is the Dragon who is the deceiver, the false 
accuser, the father of the Lie (John 8:44; Rev. 12:9); God's people 
are characterized by truthfulness (Eph. 4:24-27). As St. Paul de- 
clared regarding the heathen, the basic Lie is idolatry: "Profess- 
ing themselves to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the 
glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of cor- 
ruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling 
creatures. . . . For they exchanged the Truth of God for the 
Lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the 



5. Terry, p. 404. 

357 



14:4-5 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Creator, who is blessed forever" (Rem. 1:22-25). At root, the 
Lie is false prophecy (cf. J er. 23), the rendering of honor and 
glory to the creature in place of the Creator. We have seen that 
the conflict between true and false prophecy, between the wit- 
nessing servant- prophets and the False Prophet, is central to the 
concerns of the Book of Revelation. In opposition to her ene- 
mies, the Church carries and proclaims the Truth. As the proph- 
ets had foretold, God raised up a faithful Remnant during the 
time of wrath and tribulation on J erusalem: 

But I will leave among you 

A humble and lowly people, 

And they will take refuge in the name of the Lord. 

The Remnant of Israel will do no wrong 

And tell no lies, 

Nor will a deceitful tongue 

Be found in their mouths. . . . (Zeph. 3:12-13) 

Commentators have often been vexed over the question of 
whether this picture is meant to represent the Church as seen on 
earth, or the Church as seen at rest, in heaven. It should be ob- 
vious that both aspects of the Church are in view here — espe- 
cially since, as we have seen, the Church on earth is "in heaven" 
(12:12; 13:6). The famous statement in Hebrews 12:22-23 pro- 
vides compelling evidence: "You have come to Mount Zion and 
to the City of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to 
myriads of angels in festal assembly, and to the Church of the 
firstborn who are enrolled in heaven. . . ." Milton Terry rightly 
remarks: "The heaven of our apocalyptist is the visional sphere 
of the glory and triumph of the Church, and no marked distinc- 
tion is recognized between the saints on earth and those in hea- 
ven. They are conceived as one great company, and death is of 
no account to them. . . . Thus the entire passage serves to illus- 
trate how saints 'dwelling in heavenly places in Christ Jesus' are 
all one in spirit and triumph, no matter what physical locality 
they may occupy." 6 For St. John, Zion "is neither in Jerusalem 
nor above the clouds; it is the whole assembly of the saints, liv- 
ing and departed."7 



6. Terry, p. 404. 

7. Barrington, p. 236. 



358 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:4-5 

In fact, Stuart Russell held that Hebrews 12:22-23 was based 
on this passage in Revelation: 'The points of resemblance are so 
marked and so numerous that it cannot possibly be accidental. 
The scene is the same - Mount Zion; the dramatis personae are 
the same - 'the general assembly and church of the first-born, 
which are written in heaven,' corresponding with the hundred 
and forty and four thousand who bear the seal of God. In the 
epistle they are called 'the church of the first-born'; the vision 
explains the title - they are 'the first-fruits unto God and to the 
Lamb'; the first converts to the faith of Christ in the Land of 
J udea. In the epistle they are designated 'the spirits of just men 
made perfect'; in the vision they are 'virgins undefiled, in whose 
mouth was found no guile; for they are without fault before the 
throne of God.' Both in the vision and the epistle we find 'the in- 
numerable company of angels' and 'the Lamb,' by whom re- 
demption was achieved. In short, it is placed beyond all reason- 
able doubt that since the author of the Apocalypse cannot be 
supposed to have drawn his description from the epistle, the 
writer of the epistle must have derived his ideas and imagery 
from the Apocalypse." 8 

Thus, while the specific application of the 144,000 is to the 
Church of the first generation, in principle they are seen as the 
Church in her entirety (which, at the time St. John was writing, 
they precisely were). This is confirmed by a comparison of the 
parallels between this passage and the description of the re- 
deemed in 5:6-11: 

14:1-5 5:6-11 

l And I looked, and behold, 6 And I saw ... a Lamb stand- 

trie Lamb was standing. . . . ing. . . . 

3 . . . before the throne and . .6. between the throne (with 
before the four living creatures the four living creatures) and 
and the elders. the elders. 



8. J. Stuart Russell, The Parousia: A Critical Inquiry into the New Testa- 
ment Doctrine of Our Lord's Second Coming (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, [1887] 1983), pp. 469f. It maybe admitted that Russell has not proved 
his case "beyond all reasonable doubt." But he has clearly established at least a 
conceptual relationship (if not a dependent one) between Hebrews 12 and Rev- 
elation 14. 

359 



14:6-7 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

14:1-5 5:6-11 

2 the Voice . . . was like harpists 8 the twenty-four elders . . . 
playing on their harps. having each one a harp. 

3 And they sing a New Song. 9 And they sing a New Song. 

4 These have been purchased 9 [The Lamb] purchased us for 
from among men as firstfruits God . . . from every tribe and 
to God and to the Lamb. tongue and people and nation. 



The Gospel and the Poisoned Cups (14:6-13) 

6 And I saw another angel flying in midheaven, having an 
eternal Gospel to preach to those who sit over the Land, and 
to every nation and tribe and tongue and people; 

7 and he said with a loud Voice: Fear God, and give Him 
glory, because the hour of His judgment has come; and wor- 
ship Him who made the heaven and the earth and the sea 
and springs of waters. 

8 And another angel, a second one, followed, saying: Fallen, 
fallen is Babylon the Great! She has made all the nations 
drink of the wine of the heat of her fornication. 

9 And another angel, a third one, followed them saying with a 
loud Voice: If anyone worships the Beast and his image, and 
receives a mark on his forehead or upon his hand, 

10 he also will drink of the wine of the heat of God, which is 
mixed in full strength in the cup of His anger; and he will be 
tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the 
holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb. 

1 1 And the smoke of their torment goes up forever and ever; 
and they have no rest day and night, those who worship the 
Beast and his image, and whoever receives the mark of the 
Beast. 

12 Here is the perseverance of the saints who keep the com- 
mandments of God and the faith of Jesus. 

13 And I heard a Voice from heaven, saying, Write: Blessed are 
the dead who die in the Lord from now on! Yes, says the 
Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their deeds 
follow with them. 

6- 7 The rest of this chapter is divided into seven sections - a 
vision of the glorified Christ, flanked on each side by three 
angels. St. John is about to make the transition between the 

360 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:6-7 

Trumpet-visions (proclamations of judgment) and the Chalice- 
visions (applications of judgment). Foreshadowing this change, 
the first three angels make special proclamations regarding the 
Lamb's victory, and the last three angels perform special actions 
to assist Him in implementing His conquest. As we would ex- 
pect, these angelic proclamations and actions parallel the duties 
of the Church, particularly of her rulers and governors. 

First, St. John sees another angel flying in midheaven, the 
sphere of the Eagle's cries of woe to the Land (8:13). But this 
angel preaches peace: The coming judgment is not an end in it- 
self, but part of the proclamation of the eternal Gospel. Con- 
trary to the speculations of several expositors, there is no reason 
to suppose that this is something other than the Gospel of which 
the New Testament constantly speaks. It is the message of the 
coming of the Kingdom, as John and Jesus had announced from 
the beginning: "Now in those days John the Baptizer came, 
preaching in the wilderness of Judea, saying, Repent, for the 
Kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Matt. 3:1-2); "And after John 
had been taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching 
the Gospel of the Kingdom of God, and saying, The time is ful- 
filled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in 
the Gospel" (Mark 1:14-15). And this is the Gospel preached by 
the angel, every element in it an aspect of the New Testament 
message: Fear God (Luke 1:50; 12:5; Acts 10:35), and give Him 
glory (Matt. 5:16; 9:8; 15:31), because the hour of His judgment 
has come (John 12:23, 31-32; 16:8-11); and worship Him who 
made the heaven and the earth and the sea (the world, Gen. 1) 
and springs of waters (Paradise, Gen. 2). All this bears striking 
resemblance to what is recorded of the apostolic Gospel (cf. 
Acts 14:15; 17:24-31). 

The angel preaches this Gospel to those who sit over the 
Land. The usual expression for the Israelite apostates is those 
who dwell in the Land (3:10; 13:8, 12, 14; 17:2, 8). This time, at- 
tention is focused on the message to the authorities of Israel, 
those who are seated or enthroned over the Land (the verb is the 
same as that used in v. 14, of the Son of Man enthroned on the 
Cloud). The Gospel message commanded the rulers of Palestine 
to submit to the lordship of Christ, to honor Him, rather than 
Caesar, as God. But the rulers and authorities rejected Him, 
saying "We will not have this Man to rule over us!" (Luke 19:14). 

361 



14:8 PART FOUR : THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

The Lord Himself proclaimed the glory and judgment of God to 
the authorities of Israel (Matt. 26:64), and warned His disciples 
that they would preach an unpopular Gospel to the rulers: "But 
beware of men; for they will deliver you up to the courts, and 
scourge you in their synagogues; and you shall even be brought 
before governors and kings for My sake, as a testimony to them 
and to the Gentiles" (Matt. 10:17-18). Moreover, "this Gospel of 
the Kingdom shall be preached in the whole world for a witness 
to all the nations, and then the end shall come" (Matt. 24:14). 
And this was the Gospel order - to the Jews first, and then to the 
Gentiles (Acts 3:26; 11:18; 13:46-48; 28:23-29; Rem. 1:16; 2:9): 
The angel preaches to the rulers of Palestine, and then to every 
nation and tribe and tongue and people. Before the end came in 
a.d.70, St. Paul tells us, the Gospel was indeed preached to all 
the world (Rem. 1:8; 10:18; Col. 1:5-6, 23). In spite of the at- 
tempts of the Dragon and his two Beasts to thwart the progress 
of the Gospel, the mission of the apostles, evangelists, martyrs, 
and confessors of the early Church was successful. The world 
was evangelized. 9 

8 Another angel, a second one follows, presenting another 
aspect of the early Church's proclamation: Fallen, fallen is Bab- 
ylon the Great! This is the first mention of "Babylon" in Revela- 
tion, a proleptic reference foreshadowing the full exposition to 
come in later chapters (similar to the early reference to the Beast 
in 11:7). It is certainly possible, however, that St. John's readers 
understood his meaning immediately. In his first epistle, pre- 
sumably written before the Revelation, St. Peter described the 
local church from which he wrote as "she who is in Babylon" 
(1 Pet. 5:13). Many have supposed this to be Rome, where St. 
Peter was (according to tradition) later martyred; but it is much 
more likely that the apostle was in Jerusalem when he wrote 
these words. Based on data from the New Testament itself, our 
natural assumption should be that "Babylon" was Jerusalem, 
since that was where he lived and exercised his ministry (Acts 
8:l;12:3;Gal. 1:18; 2:1-9; cf. 1 Pet. 4:17). Moreover, St. Peter's 
first epistle also sends greetings from Mark and Silas [Silvanus] 



9. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion P ress, 1985), pp. 90f. 

362 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:8 

(1 Pet. 5:12-13), both of whom lived in Jerusalem (Acts 12:12; 
15:22-40). 10 

In any case, the primary thrust of the prophecy has been di- 
rected against Jerusalem; it has dealt with Rome only insofar as 
Rome was related to Israel. John gives us no indication that the 
subject has been changed. As we shall see in Chapters 17 and 18, 
the evidence that the prophetic Babylon was Jerusalem is noth- 
ing short of overwhelming. The term is used of the apostate city 
just as "Sodom" and "Egypt" were used in 11:8 to describe "the 
Great City . . . where trie Lord was crucified" (note also that 
the same expression the Great City is used in 16:19 to describe 
"Babylon"). St. John's reason for applying the word to Jeru- 
salem is that Jerusalem has become a Babylon, a replica of the 
proud, idolatrous, persecuting oppressor of God's people. Terry 
rightly observes that "as Jesus in Matthew 24:14 said that the 
end of this city and the pre-Messianic age would follow the 
preaching of the Gospel among the nations, so in this Apoca- 
lypse the proclamation of the fall of Babylon the Great follows 
immediately after that of the eternal Gospel." n 

This great Harlot-City (17:1) has made all the nations drink 
of the wine of the heat of her fornication (an ironic contrast to 
the legitimate and blessed "wine of love" celebrated by Solo- 
mon, Cant. 1:2-4; 4:10; 5:1; 7:2, 9). The word usually translated 
wrath (as in KJ V) basically means heat (NASV renders it as pas- 
sion). In verse 10 the idea is definitely one of wrath, but here 
John is simply using the familiar Biblical picture of apostate 
Israel as a harlot, inflaming men's passions with the heat of lust. 
Israel has abused her privileged position as the divinely ordained 
"guide to the blind" and "light to those in darkness" (Rem. 
2:19). The nations looked to her for instruction, yet ended up 
blaspheming the name of God because of her wickedness (Rem. 
2:24). God had intended her to be Lady Wisdom, summoning 
all men to eat of her food, to drink of her wine, and to live in 
the way of understanding (Prov. 9:1-6). Instead, she had become 
Madam Folly, using stolen goods to tempt men into the depths 
of hell (Prov. 9:13-18). Like the Beast from the Land (the False 



10. For further material on the meaning of St. Peter's reference to "Baby- 
lon," see J. Stuart Russell, TheParousia,pp. 346ff. 

11. Terry, p. 407. 

363 



14:9-11 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

Prophet who speaks like the Dragon), Babylon's primary occu- 
pation is seducing others into fornication, the worship of false 
gods. 

9-n And another angel, a third one, f ollowed them, with an 
appropriate message of doom for anyone who worships the 
Beast and his image, or receives a mark in his forehead or upon 
his hand (see above, on 13:15-18). The great offense of the Land 
Beast - apostate Israel's religious leadership - was the promo- 
tion and enforcement of the worship of the Beast (13:11-17). St. 
John is thus giving a clue to the great city's identity by repeating 
his words about the Land Beast immediately after his first state- 
ment about "Babylon." He is also reminding the Christians, es- 
pecially the "angels," the Church officers, of their duty in pro- 
claiming the whole counsel of God. They must preach the un- 
compromising message of the exclusive, all-encompassing lord- 
ship of Jesus Christ against all pretenders to the Throne. They 
must speak prophetically to their generation, sternly condemn- 
ing the worship of the Beast, warning that those who drink of 
Babylon's heretical cup of State-worship also will drink of the 
wine of the wrath of God, which is mixed in full strength — liter- 
ally, mixed unmixed (or, as one commentator delightfully trans- 
lates it, mixed neat 12 ) - in the cup of His anger. The warning is 
clear: You cannot drink one cup without the other. 

Moses Stuart explains the imagery: "God is often said to give 
the cup of inflammation or indignation to nations whom He is 
about to destroy (e.g. Isa. 51:17; Lam. 4:21; Jer. 25:15-16; 49:12; 
51:7; Ezek. 23:31-34; Job 21:20; Ps. 75:8). Persons intoxicated 
are unable to destroy or even resist those that assail them; so 
that to represent them as intoxicated in the way of punishment 
is to represent them as devoted to irremedial destruction. Or we 
may present the matter in another light. Criminals about to 
suffer were often through compassion of executioners or by- 
standers presented with a stupefying potion which would dimin- 
ish their sensibility to pain, but which of course was the index or 
precursor of certain death. Thus in Mark 15:23 it is recorded 



12. Barrington, pp. 248f. With the British sense of propriety, Barrington 
admits to a certain degree of trepidation in this rendering. 

364 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:9-11 

that J esus refused to drink 'the wine mingled with myrrh,' which 
was proffered Him when He was about to be nailed to the cross. 
The holy Savior would not abate any portion of His agonies by 
the use of an intoxicating drink. But in whichever of these two 
ways the expression in our text is accounted for, the meaning re- 
mains substantially the same — for the drinking of such an intox- 
icating cup is the prelude to certain death." 13 

As we saw in verse 8, the word rendered wrath is really heat; 
those who desire Babylon's cup of "heat" will get a hotter drink 
than they bargained for, the cup of God's undiluted wrath. 
Those who fornicate with the Beast will be tormented with fire 
and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the pres- 
ence of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torment goes up for- 
ever and ever. The imagery of their permanent doom is taken 
from the utter destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah by fire and 
brimstone, when "the smoke of the land ascended like the 
smoke of a furnace" (Gen. 19:28; cf. its symbolic use in Isa. 
34:9-10, describing the fall of Edom). Incredibly, Ms. Ford 
claims that "the allusion to the Lamb is embarrassing for the 
Christian." 14 Not nearly so embarrassing as the inane remarks 
of certain commentators! The real reason for the embarrass- 
ment some scholars feel at finding these Beast-worshipers de- 
stroyed with fire and brimstone in the presence of the Lamb is 
their own modern form of Marcionism, a heretical dichotomy 
between the "gentle and loving" Christ of the New Testament 
and the "wrathful" Deity of the Old Testament. Such a distinc- 
tion is completely alien to the Bible. St. John, with more sense 

(and no apparent embarrassment), has simply been faithful to 
his Old Testament source, recasting it in New Testament terms: 
"Then the Lord rained on Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and 
fire from the Lord out of heaven, and He overthrew those 
cities, and all the valley, and all the inhabitants of those cities, 
and what grew on the ground" (Gen. 19:24-25). Certainly, the 
text itself emphasizes that the torment of the Sodomites took 
place in the presence of the Lord (just as the Altar is before the 
Throne in the Tabernacle). And St. J ohn is fully aware, even if 



13. Moses Stuart, A Commentary on the Apocalypse (Andover: Allen, 
Merrill and Wardwell, 1845), pp. 297f, 

14. J . Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and 
Commentary (Garden City: Doubleday and CO., 1975), p. 237. 

365 



14:12-13 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

his commentators are not, that the Lamb is the Lord. 

There is a grim contrast here: The worshipers of the Beast, 
and those who receive his mark, have no rest day and night from 
their torments. The words are repeated from the description of 
the cherubim in 4:8, who have no rest day and night, eternally 
engaged in a sacrifice of praise. 

12-13 Here is the perseverance of the saints. The patient con- 
fidence, hope, expectation, and faith of God's people is in the 
justice of His continual government over the earth and the cer- 
tainty of His coming judgment (cf. 13:10). The saints are not to 
fret because of evildoers, for they will wither like the grass; we 
are to trust in the Lord and do good, to rest in the Lord and wait 
patiently for Him, and we eventually will inherit the earth (Ps. 
37). The wicked persecutors will be destroyed, St. John tells his 
readers, and that shortly; with St. James he can say: 

Be patient, therefore, brethren, until the coming of the Lord. 
Behold, the farmer waits for the precious produce of the soil, be- 
ing patient about it, until it gets the early and the late rains. You 
too be patient; strengthen your hearts, for the coming of the 
Lord is at hand. Do not complain, brethren, against one 
another, that you yourselves may not be judged; behold, the 
J udge is standing right at the door! (J ames 5:7-9) 

The perseverance of the saints is necessarily bound up in the 
fact that they keep the commandments of God and the faith of 
Jesus. In opposition to all forms of creature worship, Christians 
keep the commandments; they keep the faith. The New Testa- 
ment knows nothing of a lawless Christianity, or of a devotion 
that denies the objective content of "the faith which was once 
for all delivered to the saints" (Jude 3). Christianity demands 
obedient and faithful perseverance in the face of opposition. 
Naturally that has consequences, not all of them pleasant. St. 
John's readers knew that keeping the faith could well mean their 
death. For their sakes he records the next words of the Voice 
from heaven, saying, Write: Blessed are the dead who die in the 
Lord from now on! By the work of Christ, heaven has been 
opened to God's people. The limbus patrum, the afterlife abode 
of the Old Testament faithful (the "bosom of Abraham" of 
Luke 16:22), has been unlocked and its inhabitants freed (cf. 

366 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:12-13 

1 Pet. 3:19; 4:6). Death is now the entrance to communion in 
glory with Christ and the departed saints. Jesus Christ has deliv- 
ered us from the ultimate fear of death; we can say, in the fam- 
ous lines of John Donne's "Death Be Not Proud": 

One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally, 

And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die. 

The early Christians understood that death had been con- 
quered by the resurrection of Christ; this theme recurs repeat- 
edly in their writings. Again and again one is struck with the 
note of victory in the attitude of the martyrs as they faced 
death. St. Athanasius wrote of this fact in his famous defense of 
the Christian faith: "All the disciples of Christ despise death; 
they take the offensive against it and, instead of fearing it, by 
the sign of the cross and by faith in Christ trample on it as on 
something dead. Before the divine sojourn of the Saviour even 
the holiest of men were afraid of death, and mourned the dead 
as those who perish. But now that the Saviour has raised His 
body, death is no longer terrible, but all those who believe in 
Christ tread it underfoot as nothing, and prefer to die rather 
than to deny their faith in Christ, knowing full well that when 
they die they do not perish, but live indeed, and become incor- 
ruptible through the resurrection. But that devil who of old 
wickedly exulted in death, now that the pains of death are 
loosed, he alone it is who remains truly dead. There is proof of 
this too; for men who, before they believe in Christ, think death 
horrible and are afraid of it, once they are converted despise it 
so completely that they go eagerly to meet it, and themselves 
become witnesses of the Saviour's resurrection from it. Even 
children hasten thus to die, and not men only, but women train 
themselves by bodily discipline to meet it. So weak has death 
become that even women, who used to be taken in by it, mock it 
now as a dead thing robbed of all its strength. Death has 
become like a tyrant who has been completely conquered by the 
legitimate monarch; bound hand and foot as he now is, the 
passers-by jeer at him, hitting him and abusing him, no longer 
afraid of his cruelty and rage, because of the king who has con- 
quered him. So has death been conquered and branded for what 
it is by the Saviour on the cross. It is bound hand and foot, all 

367 



14 : 12-13 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

who are in Christ trample it as they pass and as witnesses to Him 
deride it, scoffing and saying, 'O Death, where is thy victory? O 
Grave, where is thy sting?'" 15 

Bishop Eusebius, the great Church historian, was an eyewit- 
ness of many early martyrdoms, and recorded what often took 
place when Christians were placed on trial: "We were witnesses 
to the most admirable ardor of mind, and the truly divine 
energy and alacrity of those that believed in the Christ of God. 
For as soon as the sentence was pronounced against the first, 
others rushed forward from other parts to the tribunal before 
the judge, confessing they were Christians, most indifferent to 
the dreadful and multiform tortures that awaited them, but de- 
claring themselves fully and in the most undaunted manner on 
the religion which acknowledges only the one Supreme God. 
They received, indeed, the final sentence of death with gladness 
and exultation, so far as even to sing and send up hymns of 
praise and thanksgiving, until they breathed their last." 16 

The same cheerful hope is evident in St. Ignatius, Bishop of 
Antioch, the early martyr who was torn apart by wild beasts in 
Rome (around a.d. 107). In one of his famous letters, he pleaded 
with his Christian brethren in Rome not to seek his release, but 
to allow him to be "poured out a libation to God, while there is 
still an altar ready": "I write to all the churches, and I bid all 
men know, that of my own free will I die for God, unless ye 
should hinder me. I exhort you, be ye not an unseasonable kind- 
ness to me. Let me be given to the wild beasts, for through them 
I can attain unto God. I am God's wheat, and I am ground by 
the teeth of wild beasts that I may be found pure bread of 
Christ. Rather entice the wild beasts, that they may become my 
sepulchre and may leave no part of my body behind, so that I 
may not, when I am fallen asleep, be burdensome to anyone. 
Then shall I be truly a disciple of Jesus Christ, when the world 
shall not so much as see my body. Supplicate the Lord for me, 
that through these instruments I may be found a sacrifice to 
God. I do not enjoin you, as Peter and Paul did. They were 



15. St. Athanasius, On the Incarnation, translated and edited by Sister Pen- 
elope Lawson, C. S.M.V,(New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1946, 1981), 
pp. 42f. 

16. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, viii .ix.5, trans. Christian Frederick 
Cruse (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [n.d.] 1955), p. 328. 

368 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:12-13 

Apostles, I am a convict; they were free, but I am a slave to this 
very hour. Yet if I shall suffer, then am I a freed-man of Jesus 
Christ, and I shall rise free in Him. Now I am learning to put 
away every desire. 

"From Syria even unto Rome I fight with wild beasts, by 
land and sea, by night and day, being bound amidst ten leop- 
ards, even a company of soldiers, who only wax worse when 
they are kindly treated. Howbeit through their wrongdoings I 
become more completely a disciple; yet am I not hereby justi- 
fied. May I have joy of the beasts that have been prepared for 
me; and I pray that I may find them prompt; nay, I will entice 
them that they may devour me promptly, not as they have done 
to some, refusing to touch them through fear. Yea, though of 
themselves they should not be willing while I am ready, I myself 
will force them to it. Bear with me. I know what is expedient for 
me. Now I am beginning to be a disciple. May naught of things 
visible and things invisible envy me; that I may attain unto Jesus 
Christ. Come fire and cross and grappling with wild beasts, cut- 
tings and manglings, wrenching of bones, hacking of limbs, 
crushings of my whole body, come cruel tortures of the devil to 
assail me. Only be it mine to attain unto Jesus Christ. 

"The farthest bounds of the universe shall profit me nothing, 
neither the kingdoms of this world. It is good for me to die for 
Jesus Christ rather than to reign over the farthest bounds of the 
earth. Him I seek, who died on our behalf; Him I desire, who 
rose again for our sake. The pangs of a new birth are upon me. 
Bear with me, brethren. Do not hinder me from living; do not 
desire my death. Bestow not on the world one who desireth to 
be God's, neither allure him with material things. Suffer me to 
receive the pure light. When I am come thither, then shall I be a 
man. Permit me to be an imitator of the passion of my God. If 
any man bath Him within himself, let him understand what I 
desire, and let him have fellow-feeling with me, for he knows 
the things which straiten me." 17 

Alexander Schmemann reminds us, however, that "Christi- 
anity is not reconciliation of death. It is the revelation of death, 



17. St. Ignatius, Epistle to the Remans, iv-vi, ed. and trans. J. B. Light foot, 
The Apostolic Fathers (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1891] 1956), pp. 
76f. On the early Christian attitude toward martyrdom, see Louis Bouyer, The 
Spirituality of the New Testament and the Fathers (Minneapolis: The Seabury 
Press, 1963), pp. 190-210. 

369 



14:12-13 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

and it reveals death because it is the revelation of Life. Christ is 
this Life. And only if Christ is Life is death what Christianity 
proclaims it to be, namely the enemy to be destroyed, and not a 
'mystery' to be explained." 18 

Yes, says the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and 
their deeds follow with them. Again there is a contrast with the 
fate of the Beast-worshipers, who will have no rest day and 
night from their torments. The persevering saints are encouraged 
to continue in faithfulness, for their eternal rest is coming and 
their works will be rewarded. Biblical perseverance is determined 
by the rewards of eternity, not by the tribulations of the mo- 
ment. Biblical hope transcends the battle. This does not mean 
that the Bible commands an other-worldly neglect of the present 
life; but neither does it countenance a perspective that is only, or 
primarily, this-worldly. Our sinful tendency is to go in one direc- 
tion rather than the other, but God calls us to be both this- 
worldly and other-worldly. Biblical faith calls us to work in this 
world for dominion with all our might (Gen. 1:28; Eccl. 9:10), 
and at the same time reminds us constantly of our eternal hope, 
our ultimate rest. 

The Son of Man, the Harvest, and the Vintage (14:14-20) 

14 And I looked, and behold, a white Cloud, and sitting on the 
Cloud One like the Son of Man, having a golden crown on 
His head, and a sharp sickle in His hand. 

15 And another angel came out of the Temple, crying out with 
a loud Voice to Him who sat on the Cloud: Put in your sickle 
and reap, because the hour to reap has come, because the 
harvest of the Land is ripe. 

16 And He who sat on the Cloud threw His sickle over the 
Land; and the Land was reaped. 

17 And another angel came out of the Temple which is in 
heaven, and he also had a sharp sickle. 

18 And another angel, the one who has power over the fire, 
came out from the altar; and he called with a loud shout to 
him who had the sharp sickle, saying: Send forth your sharp 
sickle, and gather the clusters from the vine of the Land, be- 
cause her grapes are ripe. 

19 And the angel threw out his sickle to the Land, and gathered 



18. Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World: Sacraments and 

Orthodoxy (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1973), pp. 99f. 

370 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:14-16 

the vine of the Land, and threw it into the great winepress of 
the wrath of God. 
20 And the winepress was trodden outside the City, and blood 
came out from the winepress, up to the horses' bridles, for 
sixteen hundred stadia, 

14-16 These verses form the centerpiece of the whole sec- 
tion, verses 6-20. We have seen three angels making proclama- 
tions to the Land of Israel (v. 6-13); three more will appear, to 
perform symbolic actions over the Land (v. 15, 17-20); and in the 
center is a white Cloud, and sitting on the Cloud One like a Son 
of Man, having a golden crown on His head. This is the familiar 
Glory-Cloud, with which Christ was clothed in 10:1; now it is 
white, and not dark as on Sinai (Ex. 19:16-18; cf. Zeph. 1:14-15). 
St. John's reason for referring to the Cloud in this context can 
be discerned from his connecting it with the Son of Man. The 
reference is to Daniel's prophecy of the Coming of the Messiah 
to His inauguration as universal King - a vision which follows 
his prophecy of the Beasts with seven heads and ten horns: 

I kept looking in the night visions, 

And behold, with the Clouds of heaven 

One like a Son of Man was coming, 

And He came up to the Ancient of Days 

And was presented before Him. 

And to Him was given dominion, 

Glory, and a kingdom, 

That all the peoples, nations, and men of every language 

Might serve Him. 

His dominion is an everlasting dominion 

Which will not pass away; 

And His kingdom is one 

Which will not be destroyed. (Dan. 7:13-14) 

St. John's point is clear: Let the Beasts do their worst - the 
Son of Man has ascended in the Clouds and received everlasting 
dominion over all peoples and nations ! His Kingdom will never 
be overthrown; He will never have a successor. It is clear also 
that this is a vision, not of some future coming to earth, but of 

371 



14: 14-16 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

the result of Christ's original Ascension in the Clouds to the 
Father - the definitive Parousia. 19 The Son of Man reigns now 
as the Second Adam, the King of kings. St. John does not show 
Christ coming in the Cloud, but in fact already seated on the 
Cloud, installed on His heavenly throne. Earlier (v. 6), he 
showed us the Israelite officials sitting over the Land; over 
against them sits the Lord Christ, enthroned on the Glory- 
Cloud (cf. Ps. 2:2-6). 

The King has not only a crown on His head, but also a sharp 
sickle in His hand. And another angel came out of the Temple, 
crying out with a loud voice to Him who sat on the Cloud: Put 
in your sickle and reap, because the hour to reap has come, be- 
cause the harvest of the Land is ripe. The first angel in this triad 
repeats what the first angel of the other triad had said (v. 7): The 
hour has come! This time, however, the emphasis falls not on 
judgment but on blessing, the gathering in of the elect. This, 
too, is connected with the work of the Son of Man in His Parou- 
sia, when He sends out His "angels," His apostolic messengers, 
to gather in the elect (Matt. 24:30-31). The word for gather is, 
literally, to synagogue; His meaning is that Israel, which refused 
to be synagogue under Christ (Matt. 23:37-38), will be replaced 
by the Church as the new Synagogue. The first churches were 
simply Christian "synagogues" (James 2:2), and looked forward 
to the soon-approaching Day when apostate Israel would be 
thoroughly disinherited, and the Church revealed as the true 
Synagogue, "gathered together" in the final, New Covenant 
form (2 Thess. 2:1). Jesus described the Kingdom of God as a 
great harvest (Mark 4:26-29), and told His disciples: "Behold, I 
say to you, lift up your eyes, and look on the fields, that they are 
white for harvest. Already he who reaps is receiving wages [cf. 
Rev. 14:13], and is gathering fruit [cf. Rev. 14:4] for life eternal; 
that he who sows and he who reaps may rejoice together" (John 
4:35-36). 

Accordingly, the first angel (representing his earthly counter- 
parts) calls on the Son of Man to put in His sickle (mentioned 
seven times in this passage) and reap, praying in obedience to 
Christ's command: "The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are 



19. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 68ff., 102f. 

372 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:17-18 

few; therefore beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out work- 
ers into His harvest" (Matt. 9:37-38). From His Cloud-Throne 
the King answers the Church's prayer: Throwing His sickle over 
the earth, He sends out harvesters; the Land is reaped, and the 
fruit is brought into His Kingdom. The image of the sickle is 
connected in Scripture with Pentecost, celebrated after the grain 
had been harvested (Deut.l6:9), when the Spirit is poured out in 
salvation and blessing (Acts 2). 

17-18 St. John returns to the theme of judgment, for the 
concomitant of the gathering of the Church is the excommuni- 
cation of Israel. Genesis 21 records how the recognition of Isaac 
as the child of promise required the casting out of the bond- 
woman Hagar and her son, Ishmael; and St. Paul saw in this 
story an allegory of the rejection of old Israel and the recogni- 
tion of the Church as the "heir of the promise." He spelled it out 
to the churches of Galatia, which had been infiltrated by Judais- 
tic teachings: "It is written that Abraham had two sons, one by 
the bondwoman and one by the free woman. But the son by the 
bondwoman was born according to the flesh, and the son by the 
free woman through the promise. This is allegorically speaking: 
for these women are two covenants, one proceeding from 
Mount Sinai bearing children who are to be slaves; she is Hagar. 
Now this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia, and corresponds to 
the present Jerusalem, for she is in slavery with her children. But 
the Jerusalem above is free; she is our Mother. . . . And you, 
brethren, like Isaac, are children of promise. But as at that time 
he who was born according to the flesh persecuted him who was 
born according to the Spirit, so it is now also. But what does the 
Scripture say? 'Cast out the bondwoman and her son, for the 
son of the bondwoman shall not be an heir with the son of the 
free woman.' So then, brethren, we are not children of a bond- 
woman, but of the free woman" (Gal. 4:22-31). Old Jerusalem, 
the capital city of apostate, persecuting Judaism, was cast out, 
excommunicated from the Covenant, even as the Church was 
being recognized as the legitimate heir of the promise. Chris- 
tians, born of the Spirit, are the true children of the heavenly 
Jerusalem. 

A second angel, therefore, comes out of the Temple which is 

373 



14:17-18 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

in heaven to assist in the harvest with his sharp sickle. At first 
this appears to be simply a continuation of the first harvest, but 
St. John makes a subtle shift, going all the way back to the be- 
ginning of this section of Revelation in order to draw on its im- 
agery of wrath. Christ instructed his disciples to pray, not just 
for the conversion of Israel, but for its destruction as well; and 
thus in 6:9-11 we saw the saints gathered around the golden altar 
of incense, offering up their imprecatory prayers for vengeance. 
Shortly after that scene, at the beginning of the Trumpet vi- 
sions, an angel took the tenser of the saint's prayers, filled it 
with the fire of the altar, and threw it onto the Land; "and there 
followed peals of thunder and voices and flashes of lightning 
and an earthquake" (8:3-5). Now, at the close of the Trumpet 
section, St. John sees the same angel, the one who has power, 
not just "over fire," as most translations render it, but over the 
fire, the fire burning on the altar; and he comes specifically from 
the altar of the saints' prayers in order to render judgment, to 
bring about the historical response to the worship and the pray- 
ers of the Church. He too prays for a harvest — but this time it 
will be a harvest of the wicked, the "grapes of wrath" (Joel 3:13 
similarly combines the images of harvest and vintage). So this 
third angel calls to the second angel, the one holding the sickle, 
and says: Put in your sharp sickle, and gather the clusters from 
the vine of the Land, because her grapes are ripe. God's Vine- 
yard, Israel, is ripe for judgment. 

My well-beloved had a vineyard on a fertile hill. 

And He dug it all around, removed its stones, 

And planted it with a bright red grape. 

And He built a tower in the middle of it, 

And hewed out a wine press in it; 

Then He expected it to produce good grapes, 

But it produced only worthless ones. 

And now, O inhabitants of J erusalem and men of J udah, 

J udge between Me and My vineyard. 

What more was there to do for My vineyard that I have not done 

in it? 
Why, when I expected it to produce good grapes did it produce 

worthless ones? 
So now let Me tell you what I am going to do to My vineyard: 
I will remove its hedge and it will be consumed; 

374 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:19-20 

I will break down its wall and it will become trampled ground. 

And I will lay it waste; 

It will not be pruned or hoed; 

But briars and thorns will come up. 

I will also charge the clouds to rain no rain on it. 

For the Vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the House of Israel, 

And the men of J udah His delightful plant. 

Thus He looked for justice, but behold, bloodshed; 

For righteousness, but behold, a cry of distress. (Isa. 5:1-7) 

19-20 The Vineyard is judged: The angel threw his sickle to 
the Land, and gathered the vine of the Land, and threw it into 
the great wine press of the wrath of God to produce the sub- 
stance that will be poured from the chalices in Chapter 16. The 
repeated references to the Land (six times in verses 15-19), com- 
bined with the imagery of tfie vine of the Land, emphasize that 
this is a judgment on the Land of Israel. Reviewing the extensive 
Biblical background of the vineyard idea, Barrington con- 
cludes: "It does not seem possible to suppose that St. John could 
have intended to apply these words to any other country than 
Israel, or to any other city than Jerusalem. They echo the words 
of St. John the Baptist, with which the whole Christian pro- 
phetic movement began, Even now is the axe laid to the root of 
the tree. What is contingent in the Baptist is absolute in Revela- 
tion. Israel is rejected." 20 

The imagery of this passage is based on Isaiah's prophecy of 
the destruction of Edom, where God is described as a man 
crushing grapes in a wine press. He explains why His robe is 
stained with "juice": 

I have trodden the wine trough alone, 

And from the peoples there was no man with Me. 

I also trod them in My anger, 

And trampled them in My wrath; 

And their juice is sprinkled on My garments, 

And I stained all My raiment. 

For the Day of Vengeance was in My heart, 

And My year of redemption has come. 

And I looked, and there was no one to help, 



20. Barrington, p. 256. On Christ's use of vineyard imagery in His parables, 
see Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 76-82. 

375 



14: 19-20 PART FOUR: THE SEVEN TRUMPETS 

And I was astonished and there was no one to uphold; 

So My own arm brought salvation to Me, 

And My wrath upheld Me. 

And I trod down the peoples in My anger, 

And made them drunk in My wrath, 

And I brought down their juice to the earth. (Isa. 63:1-6) 

And the wine press was trodden outside the City, and blood 
came out from the wine press, up to the horses' bridles, for a 
distance of sixteen hundred stadia, it is unfortunate that trans- 
lations such as the New American Standard Version, due to lit- 
eralist presuppositions, render this measurement into a modern 
American measurement: two hundred miles. While that transla- 
tion does provide a good idea of the magnitude of the bloodshed, 
it entirely misses the important symbolic figure of sixteen hun- 
dred, a number which again emphasizes the Land: four squared 
(the Land), times ten squared (largeness). Sixteen hundred 
stadia is slightly more than the length of Palestine: The whole 
Land of Israel is thus represented as overflowing with blood in 
the coming nationwide judgment. The streams of running blood 
become a great Red Sea, reaching up to the horses' bridles in a 
recapitulation of the overthrow of Pharaoh's horses and char- 
iots (Ex. 14:23, 28; 15:19; cf. the extensive use of Exodus im- 
agery in the following chapter). Zechariah had foretold of a day 
when all things throughout the Land would be holy, when the 
Land would be filled with pure worshipers, when HOLY TO 
THE LORD would be inscribed even "on the bells of the horses" 
of Israel (Zech. 14:20-21). But God had raised up on Mount 
Zion a new, pure Israel, in whom the promises would be ful- 
filled. Old Israel had become apostate and unclean, her horses 
swimming in blood. 

The bloodshed covers the Land, yet it is outside the City. 
The historical fulfillment of this was, from one perspective, 
when "Galilee was all over filled with fire and blood ," as the 
troops of Vespasian and Titus overran the country. The whole 
Land, except for Jerusalem, was covered with death and devas- 
tation. 21 Theologically, however, the fulfillment of this text must 
also be related to the sacrifice of Christ, for that was the defini- 



21. See Josephus, The Jewish War, Book iii. 

376 



THE KING ON MOUNT ZION 14:19-20 

tive bloodshedding "outside the City." In the Old Testament sac- 
rificial system, "the bodies of those animals whose blood is 
brought into the holy place by the high priest as an offering for 
sin, are burned outside the camp. Therefore Jesus also, that He 
might sanctify the people through His own blood, suffered out- 
side the gate. Hence, let us go to Him outside the camp, bearing 
His reproach. For here we do not have a lasting City, but we are 
seeking the City which is to come" (Heb. 13:11-14). Outside the 
City, therefore, was the place of judgment, where the bodies of 
sacrificed animals were disposed of; and it was the Place of 
Judgment, where Christ's blood was shed by rebellious Israel. In 
this layered imagery, then, the blood flowing outside the City 
belongs to Christ, sacrificed outside the camp; and it is to be the 
blood of apostate Israel as well, cast out and excommunicated 
from "the Jerusalem above" and disinherited by the Father. 
Here is the doctrine of Limited Atonement, and with a ven- 
geance: Blood will flow - if the blood is not Christ's, shed on 
our behalf, it will be ours! "InA.D. 70 the Vine of Israel is cut 
down and trampled in the Winepress; but this destruction is the 
culmination of a process which has lasted over forty years; it 
began Outside the City, when one whom they despised and re- 
jected trod the Winepress alone, and of the people there was 
none withHim. It was in that moment that J erusalem fell." 22 



22. Barrington, p. 261. 

377 



Part Five 

COVENANT SUCCESSION AND 
CONTINUITY: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

(Revelation 15-22) 

Introduction 

As we have seen, the final section of Revelation corresponds 
to Christ's letter to the angel of the church at Thyatira, which 
speaks of His judgment on "Jezebel," the False Bride; and, like 
the letter to the angel of the church at Laodicea, it speaks 
against the economically wealthy yet spiritually wretched church 
(Judaism), which Christ is about to spit out of His mouth. This 
section also corresponds to the last of the four living creatures, 
the man-cherub, and (in St. John's order) the last quarter of the 
Zodiac, ruled by the constellation of Aquarius the Water- 
Pourer; accordingly, the symbol of judgment in this section is 
that of the angels pouring out God's wrath from their Chalices. 

We have also noted that the last division in Revelation corre- 
sponds to the fifth and final part of the covenantal treaty struc- 
ture: the succession arrangements. This deals with the continuity 
of the Covenant, the disinheritance of illegitimate members, 
and the inheritance of those who are faithful to their sworn obli- 
gations (cf. Deut. 3 1-34). 1 Moses begins this section of Deuter- 
onomy with orders for extending the Covenant into the future. 
He charges the people (31:1-6), Joshua (31:7-8), and the priests 
(31:9-13) with the duty of following the Covenant program and 



1. See Meredith G. Kline, Treaty of the Great King: The Covenant Structure 
of Deuteronomy (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1963), 
pp. 135-49; cf. Ray R. Sutton, That You May Prosper: Dominion By Cove- 
nant (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1987). 

379 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ensuring its transmission to the coming generations. Then 
(31:14-15) God appears in the Glory-Cloud at the doorway of the 
Tabernacle to meet with Moses and Joshua, and instructs them 
to teach a Song of Witness to the children of Israel. He says to 
Moses: "Behold, you are about to lie down with your fathers; 
and this people will arise and play the harlot with the strange 
gods of the Land, into the midst of which they are going, and 
will forsake Me and break My Covenant which I have made with 
them. Then My anger will be kindled against them in that day, 
and I will forsake them and hide My face from them, and they 
shall be consumed, and many evils and troubles shall come upon 
them. . . . Now therefore, write this Song for yourselves, and 
teach it to the sons of Israel; put it in their mouths, in order that 
this Song may be a witness for Me against the sons of Israel. 
. . . Then it shall come about, when many evils and troubles 
have come upon them, that this Song will testify before them as 
a witness" (31:16-21). 

As Kline shows, the Song of Witness (Deut. 32) is "Yahweh's 
covenant lawsuit against his ungrateful and unfaithful people, 
prophetically delivered through Moses, 'the man of God' (see 
Deut. 33:1, 'the man of X' being a title for the messengers of 
great kings)." 2 A model Covenant Lawsuit, the Song itself is 
structured according to the standard form of the treaty docu- 
ment. Thus we have the familiar outline: 

I. Preamble (32:1-4) 
11. Historical Prologue (32:5-14) 
III. Record of Rebellion Against Covenant Stipulations 

(32:15-18) 
IV. Sanctions: 

A. Curses Against Covenant-Breakers (32:19-25) 

B, Blessings on the Remnant Through Redemptive 
Judgment (32:26-43) 

V. Succession Arrangements (32:44-34:12) 3 

Both Moses and Joshua taught the Song of Witness to the 
people (32:44); it might well be called "the Song of Moses and 
Joshua." Accordingly, in the corresponding fifth section of Rev- 



2. Kline, Treaty of the Great King, p. 139. 

3. See ibid., pp. 140-49;I have slightly amended Kline's outline. 

380 



INTRODUCTION TO PART FIVE 

elation, St. John begins with a manifestation of God's glory at 
"the Sanctuary of the Tabernacle of the Testimony," where God 
gives a covenantal commission to seven angel-priests; as choral 
accompaniment to all this the Remnant sings "the Song of 
Moses the bond-servant of God and the Song of the Lamb." The 
Lamb, as all St. John's readers know, is Jesus, the Greek form 
of the Hebrew name Joshua; the Song is therefore "the Song of 
Moses and (the Greater) Joshua." 

In Revelation 15 and 16 the Tabernacle is opened and the 
priests are sent forth to pour out their Chalice-judgments upon 
Israel as punishment for her harlotry - the chief crime that 
called forth the original Song of Witness (Deut. 31:16). Here we 
should note one important element that ties Chapters 15-22 
together as a literary unit. After the seven angels have poured 
out their Chalices of wrath, one of the same seven angels comes 
to show St. John "the judgment of the Great Harlot" (17:1). 
Later, in the final vision of the book, another of these Chalice- 
angels shows St. John the Harlot's opposite number: "the Bride, 
the Wife of the Lamb" (21:9). Clearly, the visions relating to 
both the Harlot and the Bride are extensions of the Seven 
Chalices section of the prophecy. 

As God had declared in Moses' Song of Witness, He is the 
Jealous Husband, betrayed by the infidelity of this "perverse 
generation" (Deut.32:5, 16, 20-21; cf. Matt. 17:17; Acts 2:40). 
The punishment He sends will be that already threatened in 
Deuteronomy 28:49-57: A fearful enemy nation will arise to 
destroy Israel, bringing vengeance upon God's apostate "wife" 
(Deut. 32:21-25)." This theme is taken up and enlarged in 
Revelation 17-18, where the Harlot Bride is destroyed for her 
unfaithfulness. Yet the Remnant is saved; and, as we have seen, 
this "remnant" is ultimately larger than its original, being trans- 
formed into a great multitude that no one can count, vastly 
outnumbering the old Israel (Rev. 7). God guarantees the cove- 
nantal succession by establishing the transcendent New Cove- 
nant. Distinguishing His true heirs, He incorporates them into 
the Bride of the Lamb, the New Jerusalem; and Bride and 



4. Nevertheless, the nation used as the rod of God's anger will itself be 
smashed for its own disobedience, and the Remnant of Israel will be saved 
(Deut. 32:26-43 ; cf. Isa. 10:5-34; Rev. 17:16-17; 19:17-21). 

381 



PART FIVE :THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Bridegroom meet in the sacramental meal, the Marriage Supper 
of the Lamb (Rev. 19:1-10). 

After singing the Song of Witness, Moses outlines the future 
of the twelve tribes in a final Testament (Deut. 33; cf. Rev. 
21:12), which proclaims the Coming of the Lord in salvation 
(Deut. 33:2), and exults in the priestly and regal dominion God 
will provide for His people: 

There is none like the God of J eshurun, 

Who rides the heavens to your help, 

And through the skies in His majesty. 

The eternal God is a dwelling place, 

And underneath are the everlasting arms; 

And He drove out the enemy from before you, 

And said, "Destroy!" 

So Israel dwells in security, 

The fountain of J acob secluded, 

In a land of grain and new wine; 

His heavens also drop down dew. 

Blessed are you, O Israel; 

Who is like you, a people saved by the Lord, 

Who is the shield of your help, 

And the sword of your majesty! 

So your enemies shall cringe before you, 

And you shall tread upon their high places. 

(Deut. 33:26-29; cf. Rev. 19:11-22:5) 

Finally, the Lord takes Moses to the top of Mount Nebo, 
showing him the Promised Land, but informing him again that 
he will not be able to lead the people into it; his place must be 
taken by Joshua the Conqueror (Deut. 34:1-9). Nevertheless, 
Moses' status remains unique, for "since then no prophet has 
risen in Israel like Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face" 
(Deut. 34:10). St. John's message in Revelation, however, is that 
(as Moses wished), all the Lord 's people are prophets (Num. 
11:29). Christians, as "bond-servants" like Moses (Rev. 15:3; 
19:2, 5), are not inferior even to angels in their sanctuary privi- 
leges (19:10), but have complete access to God, exercising the 
same outspoken freedom of speech (cf. Heb. 10:19) that he en- 
joyed. Before God's heavenly Throne "His bond-servants shall 
serve Him, and they shall see His face, and H is name shall be on 
their foreheads" (Rev. 22:4). 

382 



15 

SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 

The Song of Victory (15:1-4) 

1 And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, 
seven angels who had seven plagues, which are the last, 
because in them the wrath of God is finished. 

2 And I saw, as it were, a Sea of glass mixed with fire, and 
those who had come off victorious from the Beast and from 
his image and from the number of his name, standing on the 
Sea of glass, holding harps of God. 

3 And they sing the song of Moses the bond-servant of God 
and the song of the Lamb, saying: 

Great and marvelous are Thy works, 
O Lord God, the Almighty; 
Righteous and true are Thy ways, 
Thou King of the nations. 

4 Who will not fear Thee, O Lord, and glorify Thy name? 
For Thou alone art holy; 

For all the nations will come and worship before Thee, 
For Thy righteous acts have been revealed. 

1 St. John now tells us of another sign in heaven, great and 
marvelous. Twice before he has shown us a great sign in heaven: 
the Woman clothed with the sun (12:1), and the great red 
Dragon (12:3). As Farrer says, it is "as though everything in 
12-14 had been the working out of that mighty conflict, and the 
next act were now to begin." 1 This new sign initiates the climax 
of the book: seven plagues, which are the last, because in them 
the wrath of God is finished. There is no reason to assume that 
these must be the "last" plagues in an ultimate, absolute, and 



1. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), p. 169. 

383 



15:2 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

universal sense; rather, in terms of the specifically limited pur- 
pose and scope of the Book of Revelation, they comprise the 
final outpouring of God's wrath, His great cosmic Judgment 
against Jerusalem, abolishing the Old Covenant world-order 
once and for all. Like that of the Trumpets, this series of j udg- 
ments is to be performed by seven angels (as we shall see in the 
following chapter, there are several parallels between the procla- 
mations sounded by the Trumpets and the libations poured 
from the Chalices). This opening statement is more or less the 
superscription to the rest of the book, and is explained in the 
following verses. 

2 The vision begins: St. John sees, as it were, a Sea of glass, 
the crystal Sea before God's Throne (4:6), corresponding to the 
sapphire "pavement" seen by Moses on the Holy Mountain (Ex. 
24:10), the blue crystal "firmament" through which Ezekiel passed 
in his ascension in the Glory-Cloud (Ezek. 1:26), and the brazen 
Sea (the Laver) in the Temple (1 Kings 7:23-26). In this vision, 
however, the Sea is no longer blue, but red: The glass is mixed 
with fire. The imagery ties this vision to the last scene in Chapter 
14, that of the great river of blood running the whole length of 
the Land, a truly Red Sea, through which the righteous have 
been delivered, but in which their enemies were destroyed. Now 
St. John pictures the saints rejoicing at the water's edge like 
Moses and the Israelites after the original Red Sea crossing (Ex. 
14:30-31; 15:1-21), victorious over the monster from the deep; lit- 
erally, they are those overcoming or the conquerors, "for it is 
the abiding character of 'conqueror' on which emphasis is laid, 
and not the fact of conquest." 2 The description of their con- 
quest is threefold: They have come off victorious from the Beast 
and from his image and from the number of his name. 

At the seashore, on the lip of the font, the conquerors offer 
praise: Standing on the Sea of glass, holding harps of God, they 
comprise the new priestly Temple choir that stands at the cleans- 
ing Laver, by which they were sanctified. St. Paul described the 
Red Sea deliverance as a "baptism" .of God's people (1 Cor. 
10:1-2), and the Tribulation was indeed the Church's baptism of 



2. Henry Barclay Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
Kregel Publications, [1911] 1977), p. 194. 

384 



SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 15:2 

fire: "So the great glass bowl of the sea is seen 'filled with a fiery 
mixture.' What the Israelites are brought through to salvation, 
their persecutors undergo to their destruction; Pharaoh and his 
hosts perish in the returning waters. And so we know that the 
baptism of fire must fall on the people of Antichrist; the vision 
of the bowls [Chalices] will show us how." 3 

A further interesting aspect of the Laver image comes from 
the Chronicler's story of the dedication of the Temple by King 
Solomon: "Then he stood before the altar of the Lord in the 
presence of all the assembly of Israel and spread out his hands. 
Now Solomon had made a bronze laver, 4 five cubits long, five 
cubits wide, and three cubits high, and had set it in the midst of 
the court; and he stood on it, knelt on his knees in the presence 
of all the assembly of Israel, and spread out his hands toward 
heaven" to perform the prayer of dedication (2 Chron. 6:12-13). 
This was not the great Laver in the southeast corner of the Tem- 
ple (the dimensions of which are recorded in 2 Chron. 4:2-5), 
but one of several bronze lavers constructed by Solomon (cf. 2 
Chron. 4:6, 14). Solomon stood on this '{sea" before the Altar 
and offered his supplication, thanking God for His mighty 
works, invoking His righteous judgments, and entreating Him 
for the conversion of all nations (2 Chron. 6:14-42; cf. Rev. 
15:3-4). Immediately afterward, we read: "When Solomon had 
finished praying, fire came down from heaven and consumed 
the burnt offering and the sacrifices; and the Glory of the Lord 
filled the House. And the priests could not enter into the House 
of the Lord, because the Glory of the Lord filled the Lord 's 
House" (2 Chron. 7:1-2). Similarly, at the end of the prayer of 
the saints standing on the Sea, the seven angels are given chal- 
ices filled with fiery wrath, which will fall upon the Land to con- 
sume apostate Israel as a whole burnt sacrifice; the Glory fills 
the Temple, and no one is able to enter until the sacrifice is con- 
sumed (Rev. 15:5-8). 

Another passage parallel to this is Zechariah 12, which pic- 
tures Jerusalem as a cup of drunkenness to the nations (Zech. 
12:2; cf. Rev. 14:8-10), a laver of fire that will consume the 
heathen (Zech. 12:6; Rev. 15:2). The irony of Revelation, as we 



3. Farrer, pp. 170f. 

4. Heb. kiyyor, the standard word for laver: e.g. Ex. 30:18, 28; 40:7, 11,30. 

385 



15:3 PART five: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

have seen repeatedly, is that first-century Israel herself has taken 
the place of the heathen nations in the prophecies: She is con- 
sumed in the fiery laver - the Lake of Fire - while the Church, 
having passed through the holocaust, inherits salvation. 

3 We saw in the Introduction to Part Five that the Song of 
Moses . . . and the Song of the Lamb refers to the Song of Wit- 
ness which Moses and Joshua (= Jesus, the Lamb) taught to the 
children of Israel at the border of the Promised Land (Deut. 
31-32). The imagery, however, is taken from Exodus 15, which 
records Moses' Song of triumph at the defeat of Pharaoh and 
his army in the Red Sea (two other Biblical paraphrases of 
Moses' Song in Exodus are Isaiah 12 and Habakkuk 3). It is im- 
portant to note that both Songs of Moses are firmly rooted in 
history: Both proclaim that the salvation God provides is His 
victory in this world, over the heathen of this world. These 
saints through Christ are overcomes, in time and on earth. As 
R. J. Rushdoony says, "The earth is the Lord's, and the area of 
His victory. The issue of the kingdom's battle will be no more a 
flight from history than was the incarnation and the atonement. 
God the Son did not enter history in order to surrender it. He 
came to redeem His elect, assert His crown rights, make mani- 
fest the implications of His victory, and then to re-create all 
things in terms of His sovereign will." 5 

St. John's text of the Song of Moses does not actually quote 
from either Exodus 15 or Deuteronomy 32, although some of its 
phrasing contains faint echoes of the latter; however, as Farrer 
observes, "it is characteristic of St. John that he is content with 
having made the references; the beautiful psalm he puts into the 
mouths of the saints is a cento of phrases from all over the psal- 
ter and elsewhere." 6 Edersheim comments on the relationship of 
this scene to the Sabbath services in the Temple: "It is the Sab- 
bath of the Church; and as on the Sabbath, besides the psalm 
for the day [Ps. 92] at the ordinary sacrifice, they sang at the ad- 
ditional Sabbatic sacrifice [Num. 28:9-10], in the morning, the 
Song of Moses, in Deuteronomy 32, and in the evening that in 



5. Rousas John Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel and 
Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1970] 1978), p. 93. 

6. Farrer, p. 171. 

386 



SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 15:4 

Exodus 15, so the victorious Church celebrates her true Sabbath 
of rest by singing this same 'Song of Moses and of the Lamb,' 
only in language that expresses the fullest meaning of the Sab- 
bath songs in the Temple." 7 

It is probably impossible to track down the Song's Old Testa- 
ment allusions completely, but I have at least noted some of 
them: Great and marvelous are Thy works, O Lord God, the 
Almighty (Ex. 34:10; Deut. 32:3-4; 1 Chron. 16:8-12; Ps. 92:5; 
111:2; 139:14; Isa. 47:4; Jer. 10:16; Amos 4:13; cf. Rev. 1:8); St. 
John makes it clear that the saints are not merely making a gen- 
eral statement of fact, but instead are specifically referring to 
the "great and marvelous" final judgments in which "the wrath 
of God is finished" (15:1). Righteous and true are Thy ways 
(Deut. 32:4; Ps. 145:17; Hos. 14:9); again, God is said to be 
"righteous and true" with special reference to His saving judg- 
ments, delivering the Church and destroying His enemies (cf. 
16:7). "In seasons of tribulation on earth, when the worldly 
power appears to triumph over the church, she has often been 
led to doubt the greatness of God's works, the justice and truth 
of His ways; to doubt whether He were really the king of the 
heathen. Now this doubt is put to shame; it is dispelled by 
deeds; the clouds, which veiled the glory of God from her eyes, 
are made entirely to vanish." 8 Thou King of the nations (Ps. 
22:28; 47:2, 7-8; 82:8; cf. 1 Tim. 1:17; 6:15; Rev. 1:5; 19:16); as 
Ruler of all nations He moves the armies of earth to fulfill His 
purposes in judgment; He smashes them for their rebellion; and 
He brings them to repentance. 

4 Who will not fear Thee, O Lord, and glorify Thy name? 
(Ex. 15:14-16; Jer, 10:6-7; cf. Rev. 14:7); this means, in language 
we are more familiar with: Who will not be converted? Who will 
not serve God, worship Him, and obey Him? The clear implica- 
tion (to be made explicit in the next sentence) is that the over- 
whelming majority of all men will come into the salvation that 
God has provided in Jesus Christ. This is the great hope of the 



7. Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry and Services As They Were 
at the Time of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing 
Co., 1980), p. 76. 

8. E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John, two vols. (Cherry Hill, 
NJ: Mack Publishing Co., [1851] 1972), Vol. 2, pp. 146f. 

387 



15:5 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Old Covenant fathers, as numerous passages abundantly attest. 
For Thou alone art holy (Ex. 15:11; 1 Sam. 2:2; Ps. 99:3,5, 9; 
Isa. 6:3;57:5, 15; Hos. 11:9; cf. Matt. 19:17; 1 Tim. 6:16). God's 
"holiness" in Scripture often refers not so much to His ethical 
qualities as to His unique majesty, His absolute transcendence 
and "otherness." Yet this very "unapproachableness" is here 
stated to be the precise reason for His immanence, His nearness, 
His accessibility to all peoples. The doctrine is declared positively: 
For all the nations will come and worship before Thee, for Thy 
righteous acts have been revealed (1 Chron. 16:28-31; Ps. 2:8; 
22:27; 65:2; 66:4; 67:1-7; 86:8-9; 117:1; Isa. 26:9; 66:23; Jer. 
16:19); the conversion of all nations is both the ultimate goal and 
inevitable result of God's judgments. The fall of Israel, St. John 
is telling the Church, will bring about the salvation of the world 

(and St. Paul extended the logic: Israel's fall must therefore 
eventually produce her own restoration to the covenant; Rem. 
11:11-12, 15, 23-32). 

The Sanctuary Is Opened (15:5-8) 

5 After these things I looked, and the Temple of the Taber- 
nacle of the Testimony in heaven was opened, 

6 and the seven angels who had the seven plagues came out of 
the Temple. They were clothed in linen, clean and bright, 
and girded around their breasts with golden girdles. 

7 And one of the four living creatures gave to the seven angels 
seven golden bowls full of the wrath of God, who lives for- 
ever and ever. 

8 And the Temple was filled with smoke from the Glory of 
God and from His power; and no one was able to enter the 
Temple until the seven plagues of the seven angels were fin- 
ished. 

5 Now the scene changes, and we are shown the Temple of 
the Tabernacle of the Testimony in heaven, the "true Tabernacle" 
(Heb.8:2), the divine Pattern, of which the Tabernacle on earth 
was a "copy and shadow" (Heb. 8:5; 9:11-12, 23-24; 10:1; Ex. 
25:9,40; 26:30; Num. 8:4; Acts 7:44). St. John is very careful to 
use correct technical expressions for his imagery here, based on 
the Old Covenant order. The basic treaty document of the Cove- 
nant was the Decalogue; this was often called the Testimony, 
emphasizing its legal character as the record of the Covenant 

388 



SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 15:6-7 

oath (Ex. 16:34;25:16, 21-22; 31:18; 32:15; cf. Ps. 19:7; Isa. 8:16, 

20). The Tabernacle, in which the Testimony was kept, was 
therefore called the Tabernacle of the Testimony (Ex. 38:21; 
Num. 1:50,53; 9:15; 10:11; Acts 7:44). As we have seen, in Reve- 
lation the Temple (Greek naos) is the Sanctuary, or Holy Place 

(cf. 3:12; 7:15; 11:1-2, 19; 14:15, 17). 

A major aspect of St. John's message in Revelation is the 
coming of the New Covenant. In his theology (as in the rest of 
the New Testament), the Church is the naos, the Temple. The 
writer to the Hebrews shows that the Mosaic Tabernacle was 
both a copy of the heavenly Original and a foreshadowing of the 
Church in the New Covenant (Heb. 8:5; 10:1); St. John draws 
the conclusion, showing that these two, the heavenly Pattern 
and the final form, coalesce in the New Covenant age: The 
Church tabernacles in heaven. And, if the Temple is the Church, 
the Testimony is the New Covenant, the Testimony ofJesus(l:2, 
9; 6:9; 12:11, 17; 19:10; 20:4). 

6-7 The seven angels who had the seven plagues came out of 
the Temple, in order to apply the Curses proclaimed by the 
Trumpets. As priests of the New Covenant, these angel-ministers 
are clothed in linen, clean and bright, and girded around their 
breasts with golden girdles, in the image and likeness of their 
Lord (1:13; cf. Ex. 28:26-29, 39-43; Lev. 16:4). 

And one of the four living creatures gave to the seven angels 
seven golden Chalices; presumably, this cherub is the one with 
the man's face (4:7), since the other three have already appeared 
on the stage of the drama, and since St. J ohn is proceeding sys- 
tematically through the quarters of the Zodiac. We saw that he 
began in the Spring (Easter), with the sign of Taurus governing 
the Preamble and the Seven Letters; moved through Summer 
with Leo ruling the Seven Seals; continued through Autumn 
under Scorpio (the Eagle/Scorpion) and the Seven Trumpets; 
and now he arrives in Winter, with Aquarius, the Waterer, 
supervising the outpouring of the wrath of God from the Seven 
Chalices. 

I have called these seven containers Chalices (rather than 
vials IKJV] or bowls [NASV]) to emphasize their character as a 
"negative sacrament." From one perspective, the substance in 
the Chalices (God's wrath, which is "hot," cf. 14:10) seems to be 

389 



15:6-7 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN chalices 

fire, and several commentators have therefore seen the contain- 
ers as incense-bowls (5:8; cf. 8:3-5). Yet the wicked are con- 
demned in 14:10 to "drink of the wine of the wrath of God, 
which is mixed in full strength in the cup of His anger"; and, 
when the plagues are poured out, the "Angel of the waters" ex- 
ults in the appropriateness of God's justice: "For they poured 
out the blood of saints and prophets, and Thou hast given them 
blood to drink" (16:6). A few verses later, St. John returns to the 
image of "the cup of the wine of His fierce wrath" (16:19). What 
is being modeled in heaven for the Church's instruction on earth 
is the final excommunication of apostate Israel, when the Com- 
munion of the Body and Blood of the Lord is at long last denied 
to her. The angel-bishops, entrusted with the Sacramental sanc- 
tions of the covenant, are sent from the heavenly Temple itself, 
and from the Throne of God, to pour out upon her the Blood of 
the Covenant. Jesus warned the rebels of Israel that he would 
send His martyrs to them to be killed, "so that upon you may 
fall all the righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of 
righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, 
whom you murdered between the Temple and the Altar. Truly I 
say to you, all these things shall come upon this generation" 
(Matt. 23:35-36). Drinking Blood is inescapable: Either the min- 
isters of the New Covenant will serve it to us in the Eucharist, or 
they will pour it out of their Chalices upon our heads. 

Austin Farrer explains some of the Old Covenant imagery 
behind the symbol of the Chalices. "The 'bowls,' phialae,ave 
libation-bowls. Now the libation, or drink-offering, was poured 
at the daily sacrifice just after the trumpets had begun to sound, 
so that by placing bowls in sequence to trumpets St. John main- 
tains the sequence of ritual action that began with the slaugh- 
tered Lamb, continued in the incense-offering and passed into 
the trumpet-blasts. Because the drink-offering had such a posi- 
tion, it was the last ritual act, completing the service of the altar, 
and was proverbial in that connexion (Phil. 2:17). The drink- 
offering, as St. Paul implies, was poured upon the slaughtered 
victim, burning in the fire. Because there is no bloody sacrifice 
in heaven, the angels pour their libations upon the terrible 
holocaust of vengeance which divine justice makes on earth." 9 



Farrer, p. 174. 

390 



SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 15:6-7 

We should be reminded in this context of the purification 
offering, designed to atone for the defilement of a place, so that 
God could continue to dwell with His people (cf. comments on 
9:13). If the whole nation sinned, so that the entire Land was de- 
filed, the priests were required to perform special rites of purifi- 
cation: The blood of the sacrifice was sprinkled seven times to- 
ward the veil before the Holy of Holies, then smeared on the 
four horns of the altar, and the remainder poured out at the foot 
of the altar (Lev. 4:13-21). 10 But in the outpoured plagues of the 
Chalice -judgments, this is reversed, as Philip Barrington points 
out: "This Blood, instead of bringing reconciliation, brings re- 
jection and vengeance. Instead of being sprinkled seven times 
towards the veil, it is poured seven times on the Land. Instead 
of the appearance of the High Priest with the blood of reconcili- 
ation, we have Seven Angels with the Blood of Vengeance." n 

Why is the blood in Revelation no longer sprinkled toward 
the veil? Because Jesus' blood has already been offered, and 
Israel has rejected it. As the writer to the Hebrews warned just 
before the Holocaust: "If we go on sinning wilfully after receiv- 
ing the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacri- 
fice for sins, but a certain terrifying expectation of judgment, 
and the fury of a fire that will consume the adversaries. Anyone 
who has set aside the Law of Moses dies without mercy on the 
testimony of two or three witnesses. How much severer punish- 
ment do you think he will deserve who has trampled under foot 
the Son of God, and has regarded as unclean the blood of the 
covenant by which he was sanctified, and has insulted the Spirit 
of grace? For we know Him who said: Vengeance is Mine, I will 
repay ! And again: The Lord will judge His people! It is a terri- 
fying thing to fall into the hands of the living God" (Heb. 
10:26-31). 

That is precisely St. John's point here: Blood and fire are 
about to be poured out upon the Land of Israel from the Seven 
Chalices, which are full of the wrath of God, who lives forever 
and ever. Indeed, God's eternal nature ("As I live forever!") was 



10. See Gordon J. Wenham, The Book of Leviticus (Grand Rapids: William 
B.Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1979), pp. 86-103. 

11. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), p. 262. 

391 



15:8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

given in the Song of Moses as a pledge of His vengeance against 
His enemies, and those who shed the blood of His servants 
(Deut. 32:40-43). Thus we are shown that the seven angels with 
the plagues come from the Tabernacle of the Testimony, bearing 
in their hands the curses of the Covenant; they come from the 
Temple, the Church, as ministers binding on earth the decrees of 
heaven against those who have rejected the Testimony of Jesus; 
and they come from the Throne of God Himself, having re- 
ceived their Chalices of wrath from one of the cherubs who 
carry God's Throne (cf. 4:6). 

8 At the dedication of both the Tabernacle of Moses and the 
Temple of Solomon, the Sanctuary was filled with smoke from 
the Glory of God and from His power; and no one was able to 
enter (see Ex. 40:34-35; 1 Kings 8:10-11; 2 Chron.5:ll-14;7:l-3). 
As we have seen, this phenomenon happened in connection with 
heavenly fire descending and consuming the sacrifices (Lev. 
9:23-24; 2 Chron. 7:1-3). The filling of the Temple was thus both 
a sign of God's gracious presence with His people and an awe- 
some revelation of His terrible wrath against sinners, a warning 
that His fiery judgment would be sent forth from the Temple 
against those who rebelled against Him (for examples of this, 
see Lev. 10:1-3; Num. 11:1-3; 16:35). 

With the coming of the New Covenant, the Church of Jesus 
Christ became the Temple of God. This new redemptive event 
was signaled by the Spirit's filling the Church on the Day of Pen- 
tecost, as He had filled the Tabernacle and the Temple. As St. 
Peter declared, however, the Pentecostal outpouring would be 
accompanied at the end of the age by a Holocaustal outpouring 
as well: "Blood, and fire, and vapor of smoke" (Acts 2: 16-21; cf. 
Joel 2:28-32). For the Church to take full possession of her in- 
heritance, for her to assume her proper place as the New Cove- 
nant Temple, the corrupt scaffold of the Old Covenant had to be 
thrown down and demolished. The first-generation Christians 
were continually exhorted to look forward to the fast-approach- 
ing Day when their adversaries would be consumed, and the 
Church "synagogued" as the definitive Temple (cf. 2 Thess. 2:1; 
Heb. 10:25). In the complete sense of New Covenant fullness 
and "perfection" (cf. 1 Cor. 13:12), no one was able to enter the 
Temple until the seven plagues of the seven angels were finished 

392 



SEVEN LAST PLAGUES 15:8 

in the destruction of Old Covenant Israel. 

E. W. Hengstenberg mentions a related aspect of this sym- 
bol: "So long as Israel was the people of the Lord the pillar of 
cloud exclaimed to all his enemies, Touch not Mine anointed, 
and do My prophets no harm.' So here; that the temple is full of 
smoke, and no one is able to go into it, this is 'a sign for believ- 
ers, that the Lord in love to them was now going to complete the 
destruction of their enemies.' 12 Besides, we see quite plainly in 
Isaiah 6 the reason why none could enter in. If God manifests 
Himself in the whole glory of His nature, in the whole energy of 
His punitive righteousness, the creature must feel itself pene- 
trated by a deep feeling of its nothingness - not merely the sinful 
creature, as there in the case of Isaiah, but also the finite, ac- 
cording to Job 4:18; 15:15. . . . Bengel 13 remarks, 'When God 
pours out His fury, it is fit that even those who stand well with 
Him should withdraw for a little, and should restrain their in- 
quiring looks. All should stand back in profound reverence, till 
by and by the sky become clear again.' " 14 



12. C. F. J. Zullig,L>i'e Offenbarung Johannis erklart (Stuttgart, 1834-40). 

13. J. A. Bengel, Erklarte Offenbarung Johannis (Stuttgart, 1740). 

14. Hengstenberg, Vol. 2, p. 153. 

393 



16 
JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 

The Seventh Trumpet was the sign that "there shall be no 
more delay" (cf. 10:6-7). Time has run out; wrath to the utmost 
has now come upon Israel. From this point on, St. John aban- 
dons the language and imagery of warning, concentrating wholly 
on the message of Jerusalem's impending destruction. As he 
describes the City's doom, he extends and intensifies the Exodus 
imagery that has already been so pervasive throughout the 
prophecy. Again he mentions "the Great City" (16:19), remind- 
ing his readers of a previous reference: "the Great City, which 
Spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also their Lord 
was crucified" (11 :8). J erusalem is called Sodom because of its 
sensual, luxurious apostasy (cf. Ezek. 16:49-50), and because it 
is devoted to total destruction as a whole burnt sacrifice (Gen. 
19:24-28; Deut. 13:12-18). But St. J ohn's more usual metaphors 
for the Great City are taken from the Exodus pattern: J erusalem 
is not only Egypt, but also the other enemies of Israel. He has 
shown us the Egyptian Dragon chasing the Woman into the wil- 
derness (Chapter 12); a revived Balak and Balaam seeking to 
destroy God's people by war and by seduction to idolatry 
(chapter 13); the sealed armies of the New Israel gathered on 
Mount Zion to celebrate the feasts (Chapter 14); and the saints 
standing in triumph at the "Red Sea," singing the Song of Moses 
(chapter 15). Now, in Chapter 16, seven judgments correspond- 
ing to the ten Egyptian Plagues are to be poured out on the 
Great City. 

There is also a marked correspondence between these Chalice- 
judgments and the Trumpet-judgments of Chapters 8-11.1 Be- 



1. The correspondence is not exact, however; and Russell characteristically 
goes too far when, after a superficial comparison, he categorically declares: 

395 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

cause the Trumpets were essentially warnings, they took only a 
third of the Land; with the Chalices, the destruction is total. 



Chalices 

1. On the Land, be- 
coming sores (16:2) 

2. On the sea, be- 
coming blood (16:3) 



3. On rivers and 
springs, becoming 
blood (16:4-7) 

4. On the sun, caus- 
ing it to scorch 
(16:8-9) 

5. On the throne of 
the Beast, causing 
darkness (16:10-11) 

6. On the Euphrates, 
drying it up to make 
way for kings of the 
east; invasion of 
frog-demons; Arma- 
geddon (16:12-16) 

7. On the air, caus- 
ing storm, earth- 
quake, and hail 
(16:17-21) 



Trumpets 

1. On the Land; Vi 
earth, trees, grass 
burned (8:7) 

2. On the sea; !4 sea 
becomes blood, X A 
sea creatures die, 1/3 
ships destroyed 
(8:8-9) 

3. On the rivers and 
springs; Yi waters 
become wormwood 
(8:10-11) 

4. Vi of sun, moon, 
and stars darkened 
(8:12) 

5. Demonic locusts 
tormenting men 
(9:1-12) 

6. Army from 
Euphrates kills V} 
mankind (9:13-21) 



7. Voices, storm, 
earthquake, hail 
(11:15-19) 



Plagues on Egypt 

1. Boils (sixth 
plague: Ex. 9:8-12) 

2. Waters become 
blood (first plague: 
Ex. 7:17-21) 



3. Waters become 
blood (first plague: 
Ex. 7:17-21) 

4. Darkness (ninth 
plague: Ex. 10:21-23) 

5. Locusts (eighth 
plague: Ex. 10:4-20) 

6. Invasion of frogs 
from river (second 
plague: Ex. 8:2-4) 



7. Hail (seventh 
plague: Ex. 9:18-26) 



The First Four Chalices: God's Creation 
Takes Vengeance (16:1-9) 

1 And I heard a loud Voice from the Temple, saying to the 
seven angels: Go and pour out the seven Chalices of the wrath 

"This cannot be mere casual coincidence: it is identity, and it suggests the in- 
quiry, For what reason is the vision thus repeated?" (J. Stuart Russell, The 
Parousia: A Critical Inquiry into the New Testament Doctrine of Our Lord's 
Second Coming [Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983], p. 476). 



396 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:1 

of God into the Land. 

2 And the first angel went and poured out his Chalice into the 
Land; and it became a loathsome and malignant sore upon 
the men who had the mark of the Beast and who worshiped 
his image. 

3 And the second angel poured out his Chalice into the sea, 
and it became blood like that of a dead man; and every liv- 
ing soul in the sea died. 

4 And the third angel poured out his Chalice into the rivers 
and the springs of waters; and it became blood. 

5 And I heard the Angel of the Waters saying: Righteous art 
Thou, who art and who wast, O Holy One, because Thou 
didst judge these things; 

6 for they poured out the blood of saints and prophets, and 
Thou hast given them blood to drink: They are worthy! 

7 And I heard the altar saying: Yes, O Lord God, the Al- 
might y, true and righteous are Thy judgments. 

8 And the fourth angel poured out his Chalice upon the sun; 
and it was given to it to scorch the men with fire. 

9 And the men were scorched with great heat; and the men 
blasphemed the name of God who has the power over these 
plagues; and they did not repent, so as to give Him glory. 

1 The command authorizing the judgments is given by a 
loud Voice from the Temple, again underscoring both the divine 
and ecclesiastical origin of these terrible plagues (cf. 15:5 -8).2 
"The judgments of the vials are the overflow of the wrath of 
God blazing forth and filling his temple, a visitation or presence 
vouchsafed in response to the prayers of his saints ."3 The seven 
angels (cf. 15: 1) are told to pour out the Chalices of God's 
wrath: The Septuagint uses this verb (ekched) in the directions 
to the priest to pour out the blood of the sacrifice around the 
base of the altar (cf. Lev. 4:7, 12, 18, 25, 30, 34; 8:15; 9:9). The 
term is used in Ezekiel with reference to apostate Israel's forni- 
cation with the heathen (Ezek. 16:36; 23:8), of her shedding of 
innocent blood through oppression and idolatry (Ezek. 22:3-4, 
6,9, 12, 27), and of God's threat to pour out His wrath upon her 



2. Cf. Isa. 66:6- "A Voice of uproar from the City, a Voice from the Tem- 
ple: The Voice of the Lord who is rendering recompense to His enemies !" 

3. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), p. 175. 

397 



16:2-3 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

(Ezek. 14:19; 20:8, 13, 21; 21:31). In the New Testament, it is 
similarly used in contexts that parallel major themes in Revela- 
tion: the spilling of wine (Matt.9:17; Mark 2:22; Luke 5 :37), the 
shedding of Christ's blood (Matt. 26:28; Mark 14:24; Luke 
22:20), the shedding of the martyrs' blood (Matt. 23:35; Luke 
11:50; Acts 22:20; Rem. 3:15), and the outpouring of the Spirit 
(Acts 2:17-18, 33; 10:45; Rem. 5:5; Tit. 3:6; cf. Joel 2:28-29; 
Zech. 12:10). All these different associations are in the back- 
ground of this outpouring of plagues into the Land that has 
spilled the blood of Christ and His witnesses, the people who 
have resisted and rejected the Spirit: The old wineskins of Israel 
are about to split open. 

2 As the first angel pours out his Chalice into the Land, it 
becomes a loathsome and malignant sore upon the men who 
had the mark of the Beast and who worshiped his image. The 
sores are a fitting retribution for apostasy, "a hideous stamp 
avenging the mark of the Beast"4 — as if the mark had "broken 
out in a deadly infection. "5 J ust as God had poured out boils on 
the ungodly, state-worshiping Egyptians who persecuted His 
people (Ex. 9:8-11), so He is plaguing these worshipers of the 
Beast in the Land of Israel - the Covenant people who have now 
become Egyptian persecutors of the Church. This plague is spe- 
cifically mentioned by Moses in his list of the curses of the Cove- 
nant for idolatry and apostasy: 'The Lord will smite you with 
the boils of Egypt and with tumors and with the scab and with 
the itch, from which you cannot be healed. . . . The Lord will 
strike you on the knees and legs with sore boils, from which you 
cannot be healed, from the sole of your foot to the crown of 
your head" (Deut.28:27, 35). 

3 The second angel pours out his Chalice into the sea, and it 
becomes blood, as in the first Egyptian plague (Ex. 7:17-21) and 
the Second Trumpet (Rev. 8:8-9). This time, however, the blood 
is not running in streams, but instead is like that of a dead man: 



4. Ibid., p. 175. 

5. J. P. M. Sweet, Revelation (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1979), 
p. 244. 

398 



J UDGME NT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:3 

clotted, coagulated, and putrefying. 6 Blood is mentioned four 
times in this chapter; it covers the face of Israel, spilling over the 
four corners of the Land. 

While the primary significance of this plague is symbolic, re- 
ferring to the uncleanness of contact with blood and death (cf. 
Lev. 7:26-27; 15:19-33; 17:10-16; 21:1; Num. 5:2; 19:11-19), there 
are close parallels in the actual events of the Great Tribulation. 
On one occasion, thousands of J ewish rebels fled to the Sea of 
Galilee from the Roman massacre of Tarichaeae. Setting out on 
the lake in small, flimsy boats, they were soon pursued and over- 
taken by the sturdy rafts of Vespasian's superior forces. Then, 
as J osephus recounts, they were mercilessly slaughtered: 'The 
J ews could neither escape to land, where all were in arms against 
them, nor sustain a naval battle on equal terms. . . . Disaster 
overtook them and they were sent to the bottom, boats and all. 
Some tried to break through, but the Remans could reach them 
with their lances, killing others by leaping upon the barks and 
passing their swords through their bodies; sometimes as the 
rafts closed in, the J ews were caught in the middle and captured 
along with their vessels. If any of those who had been plunged 
into the water came to the surface, they were quickly dispatched 
with an arrow or a raft overtook them; if, in their extremity, 
they attempted to climb on board the enemy's rafts, the Remans 
cut off their heads or their hands. So these wretches died on 
every side in countless numbers and in every possible way, until 
the survivors were routed and driven onto the shore, their ves- 
sels surrounded by the enemy. As they threw themselves on 
them, many were speared while still in the water; many jumped 
ashore, where they were killed by the Remans. 



6. In passing, we may note here an example of the constant tendency of the 
so-called "literalist" interpretation to indulge in fanciful speculations regarding 
the fulfillment of these prophecies. Dr. Henry Morris, who has written what 
his publishers have called "the most literal exposition of Revelation you will 
ever read!" offers his interpretation of this phenomenon: "It is merely a chem- 
ical solution, water containing iron and other chemicals which give it a blood- 
red appearance" (The Revelation Record: A Scientific and Devotional Com- 
mentary on the Book of Revelation [Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, 
1983], p. 298). This is especially interesting in light of his stated principle of in- 
terpretation: "Actually, a 'literal interpretation' is a contradiction in terms, 
since one does not interpret (that is, 'translate' saying 'this means that') if he 
simply accepts a statement as meaning precisely what it says. Furthermore, the 
terms 'more literal' or 'most literal' are redundancies. Literal is literal" (p. 24). 

399 



16:4-7 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

"One could see the whole lake stained with blood and 
crammed with corpses, for not a man escaped. During the days 

that followed a horrible stench hung over the region, and it 
presented an equally horrifying spectacle. The beaches were 
strewn with wrecks and swollen bodies, which, hot and clammy 
with decay, made the air so foul that the catastrophe that plunged 
the Jews in mourning revolted even those who had brought it 
about.'" 

4-7 The plague of the Third Chalice more directly resembles 
the first Egyptian plague (and the Third Trumpet: cf. 8:10-11), 

since it affects the rivers and the springs of waters, turning all 
the drinking water to blood. Water is a symbol of life and bless- 
ing throughout Scripture, beginning from the story of creation 

and the Garden of Eden. 'In this plague, the blessings of Para- 
dise are reversed and turned into a nightmare; what was once 
pure and clean becomes polluted and unclean through apostasy. 

The Angel of the Waters responds to this curse by praising 
God for His just judgment: Righteous art Thou, who art and 
who wast, O Holy One, because Thou didst judge these things. 
We should not be embarrassed by a passage such as this. The 
whole Bible is written from the perspective of cosmic personal- 
ism — the doctrine that God, who is absolute personality, is con- 
stantly active throughout His creation, everywhere present with 
the whole of His being, bringing all things to pass immediately 
by His power and mediately through His angelic servants. There 
is no such thing as natural "law"; rather, as Auguste Lecerf has 
said, "the constant relations which we call natural laws are 
simply 'divine habits': or, better, the habitual order which God 
imposes on nature. It is these habits, or this habitual proc- 
ess, which constitute the object of the natural and physical 
sciences." 9 

This is what guarantees the validity and reliability of both 
scientific investigation and prayer: On the one hand, God's 
angels have habits - a cosmic dance, a liturgy involving every 



7. Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, iii.x.9. 

8. David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 18ff,30f. 

9. Auguste Lecerf, A n Introduction to Reformed Dogmatics, trans. Andre 
Schlemmer (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1949] 1981), p. 147. 

400 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:4-7 

aspect of the whole universe, that can be depended upon in all 
of man's technological labors as he exercises dominion under 
God over the world. On the other hand, God's angels are 

personal beings, constantly carrying out His commands; in 
response to our petitions, He can and does order the angels to 
change the dance. I0 

There is, therefore, an "Angel of the Waters" (in terms of St. 
John's zodiacal progression, this is presumably the cherub of the 
fourth quarter, Aquarius); J1 he, along with all of God's personal 
creation, rejoices in God's righteous government of the world. 
God's strict justice, summarized in the principle of lex tdlionis , 
is evidenced in this judgment; the punishment fits the crime. 

They poured out the blood of saints and prophets, and Thou 
hast given them blood to drink. As we have seen, the characteris- 
tic CrilTie of Israel was always the murder of the prophets (cf . 2 
Chron, 36:15-16; Luke 13:33-34; Acts 7:52): Jesus named this fact 
as the specific reason why the blood of the righteous would be 
poured out in judgment upon that generation (Matt. 23:31-36). 

The Angel of the Waters concludes with an interesting state- 
ment: By the apostates' shedding of blood, they are worthy! 
ThisiS a deliberate parallel to the message of the New Song: 
"Worthy art Thou to take the Book, and to break its seals; for 
Thou wast slain, and didst purchase us for God with Thy 
blood" (5:9). Just as the Lamb received His reward on the basis 
of the blood He shed, so these persecutors have now received 
the JUSt recompense for their bloodshed. 

God had once promised the oppressed of Israel that He 
would render to their enemies according to their evil works: 

I will feed your oppressors with their own flesh, 

And they will become drunk with their own blood as with 

sweet wine; 
And all flesh will know that I, the Lord, am your Savior, 
And your Redeemer, the Mighty One of Jacob. (Isa. 49:26) 

This has, as usual, become reversed: Now it is Israel, the 



10. Cf. ibid., pp. 147-49. 

1 1 . The mention of the Angel of the Waters also serves as another of the 
many subtle connections between the Book of Revelation and St. John's Gos- 
pel; see John 5:3-4. 

401 



16:8-9 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Persecutor par excellence, that will be forced to drink its own 
blood and devour its own flesh. This was true in much more 
than a figurative sense: As God had foretold through Moses 

(Deut. 28:53-57), during the siege of Jerusalem the Israelites ac- 
tually became cannibals; mothers literally ate their own chil- 
dren. 12 Because they shed the blood of the saints, God gives 
them their own blood to drink (cf. 17:6; 18:24). 

Joining the angel in praise comes the voice of the Altar itself, 
where the blood of the saints and prophets had been poured 
out. The Altar rejoices: Yes, O Lord God, the Almighty, true 
and righteous are Thy judgments ! The saints gathered round the 
base of the Altar had cried out for justice, for vengeance on 
their oppressors (6:9-11). In the destruction of Israel that prayer 
is answered; the witnesses are vindicated. It is more than coinci- 
dental that these prayers in verses 5-7 (along with the text of the 
Song of Moses in 15:3-4) are actually "based on the song sung by 
the priests and levites during the interval between the prepara- 
tion and the offering of the sacrifice." 13 Ironically - just as God 
Himself is preparing for the Whole Burnt Sacrifice of a.d.70 - 

the very angels of heaven were singing apostate Israel's own lit- 
urgy against her. 

8-9 The fourth angel now pours out his Chalice upon the 
sun; and it was given to it to scorch the men with fire. Whereas 
the Fourth Trumpet resulted in a plague of darkness (8:12), now 
the heat of the sun is increased, so that the men were scorched 
with great heat. This too is a reversal of a basic covenantal bless- 
ing that was present in the Exodus, when Israel was shielded 
from the heat of the sun by the Glory-Cloud, the Shadow of the 
Almighty (Ex. 13:21-22; cf. Ps. 91:1-6). This promise is repeated 
again and again throughout the prophets: 

The Lord is your keeper; 

The Lord is your shade on your right hand. 

The sun will not smite you by day, 

Nor the moon by night. 

The Lord will protect you from all evil; 
He will keep your soul. (Ps. 121:5-7) 



12. See Josephus, The Jewish War, vi.iii.3-4. 

13. J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: A New Translation with Introduc- 
tion and Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1975), p. 266. 

402 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:8-9 

They will not hunger or thirst, 

Neither will the scorching heat or sun strike them down; 
For He who has compassion on them will lead them, 
And will guide them to springs of water. (Isa. 49:10) 

Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, 

And whose trust is the Lord. 

For he will be like a tree planted by the water, 

That extends its roots by a stream 

And will not fear when the heat comes; 

But its leaves will be green, 

And it will not be anxious in a year of drought 

Nor cease to yield fruit. (Jer. 17:7-8) 

And He who sits on the Throne shall spread His Tabernacle 
over them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; 
neither shall the sun beat down on them, nor any heat; for the 
Lamb in the center of the Throne shall be their Shepherd, and 
shall guide them to springs of the waters of life; and God shall 
wipe away every tear from their eyes. (Rev. 7:15-17) 

We have noticed several times already that St. John uses the 
passive voice to indicate divine control. He again stresses God's 

sovereignty by telling us that it was given to the sun to scorch the 
men; and, in the very next line, he is even more explicit: God . . . 
has the power over these plagues. St. John knows nothing of a 
"God" who sits helplessly on the sidelines, watching the world 
go by; nor does he acknowledge a "God" who is too nice to send 

judgments on the wicked. He knows that the plagues falling 
upon Israel are "the works of the Lord, who has wrought deso- 
lations in the earth" (Ps. 46:8). 

In his book on the Trinity, St. Augustine emphasizes the 
same point: "The whole creation is governed by its Creator, 
from whom and by whom and in whom it was founded and es- 
tablished. And thus the will of God is the first and supreme 
cause of all corporal appearances and motions. For nothing 
happens in the visible and sensible sphere which is not ordered, 
or permitted, from the inner, invisible, and intelligible court of 
the most high Emperor, in this vast and illimitable common- 
wealth of the whole creation, according to the inexpressible jus- 

403 



16:8-9 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ticeofHis rewards and punishments, graces and retributions." 14 

But the apostates refuse to Submit to God's lordship over 
them. Like the Beast, whose head is crowned with "names of 

blasphemy" (13:1) and whose image they worship, the men blas- 
phemed the name of God who has the power over these plagues. 
And, like the impenitent Pharaoh (cf. Ex. 7:13,23; 8:15, 19, 32; 
9:7, 12, 34-35; 10:20, 27; 11:10; 14:8), they did not repent so as to 
give Him glory. Israel has become an Egypt, hardening its heart; 
and, like Egypt, it will be destroyed. 

The Last Three Chalices: It Is Finished! (16:10-21) 

10 And the fifth angel poured out his Chalice upon the throne 
of the Beast; and his kingdom became darkened; and they 
gnawed their tongues because of pain, 

11 and they blasphemed the God of heaven because of their 
pains and their sores; and they did not repent of their deeds. 

12 And the sixth angel poured out his Chalice upon the great 
river, the E uphrates; and its water was dried up, that the way 
might be prepared for the kings from the rising of the sun. 

13 And I saw coming out of the mouth of the Dragon and out 
of the mouth of the Beast and out of the mouth of the False 
Prophet, three unclean spirits like frogs; 

14 for they are spirits of demons, performing signs, which go 
out to the kings of the whole world, to gather them together 
for the War of that great Day of God, the Almighty. 

15 Behold, I am coming like a thief. Blessed is the one who 
stays awake and keeps his garments, lest he walk about naked 
and they see his shame. 

16 And they gathered them together to the place which in 
Hebrew is called Armageddon. 

17 And the seventh angel poured out his Chalice upon the air; 
and a loud Voice came from the Temple of heaven, from the 
throne, saying: It is done. 

18 And there were flashes of lightning and peals of thunder and 
voices; and there was a great earthquake, such as there had 
not been since the men came to be upon the Land, so mighty 
an earthquake, and so great. 

19 And the Great City was split into three parts, and the cities 



14. St. Augustine, On the Trinity, iii.9; Henry Bettenson, ed. and trans., 
The Later Christian Fathers (Oxford: Oxford University Press, [1972] 1977), 
p. 191. 

404 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:10-11 

of the Gentiles fell. And Babylon the Great was remembered 
before God, to give her the cup of the wine of His fierce 
wrath. 

20 And every island fled away, and the mountains were not 
found. 

21 And great hail, about the weight of a talent, comes down 
from heaven upon the men; and the men blasphemed God 
because of the plague of the hail, because its plague is ex- 
ceedingly great. 

The symbolic targets of the first four Chalices were the 
elements of the physical creation: Land, sea, waters, and the 
sun. With the last three plagues, the consequences of the angelic 
attack are more "political" in nature: the disruption of the 
Beast's kingdom; the War of the great Day of God; and the Fall 
of "Baby ion." 

10-11 Although most of the judgments throughout Revela- 
tion are aimed specifically at apostate Israel, the heathen who 
join Israel against the Church come under condemnation as 
well. Indeed, the Great Tribulation itself would prove to be 'the 
hour of testing, that hour which is to come upon the whole 
world, to test those who dwell upon the Land" (3:10). The fifth 
angel therefore pours out his Chalice upon the throne of the 
Beast; and, even as the sun's heat is scorching those who wor- 
ship the Beast, the lights are turned out on his kingdom, and it 
becomes darkened - a familiar Biblical symbol for political tur- 
moil and the fall of rulers (cf. isa. 13:9-10; Amos 8:9; Ezek. 
32:7-8). The primary significance of this plague is still the judg- 
ment on Israel, for (in terms of the message of Revelation) that 
was the throne and kingdom of the Beast. Moreover, as we shall 
see, the people who suffer from the Fifth Chalice are identified 
as suffering as well from the First Chalice, which was poured out 
upon the Land, upon the Israelite worshipers of the Beast (v. 2). 
It is also likely, however, that this judgment partially corre- 
sponds to the wars, revolutions, riots, and "world-wide convul- 
sions" 15 that racked the Empire after Nero committed suicide in 
June 68. F. W. Farrar writes in this connection of "the horrors 
inflicted upon Rome and Remans in the civil wars by provincial 



15. Cornelius Tacitus, The Histories, iii.49. 

405 



16:10-11 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

governors - already symbolized as the horns of the Wild Beast, 
and here characterized as kings yet kingdomless. Such were 
Galba, Otho, Vitellius, and Vespasian. 16 Vespasian and Mu- 
cianus deliberately planned to starve the Roman populace; 17 
and in the fierce struggle of the Vitellians against Sabinus and 
Domitian, and the massacre which followed, there occurred the 
event which sounded so portentously in the ears of every Roman 
- the burning to the ground of the Temple of the Capitoline 
J upiter, on December 19th, A.D. 69. 18 It was not the least of the 
signs of the times that the space of one year saw wrapped in 
flames the two most hallowed shrines of the ancient world - the 
Temple of J erusalem and the Temple of the great Latin god." 19 

One brief passage from Tacitus provides some idea of the 
chaotic conditions in the capital city: "Close by the fighting 
stood the people of Rome like the audience at a show, cheering 
and clapping this side or that in turns as if this were a mock 
battle in the arena. Whenever one side gave way, men would 
hide in shops or take refuge in some great house. They were 
then dragged out and killed at the instance of the mob, who 
gained most of the loot, for the soldiers were bent on bloodshed 
and massacre, and the booty fell to the crowd. 

'The whole city presented a frightful caricature of its normal 
self: fighting and casualties at one point, baths and restaurants 
at another, here the spilling of blood and the litter of dead bod- 
ies, close by prostitutes and their like — all the vice associated 
with a life of idleness and pleasure, all the dreadful deeds typical 
of a pitiless sack. These were so intimately linked that an ob- 
server would have thought Rome in the grip of a simultaneous 
orgy of violence and dissipation. There had indeed been times in 
the past when armies had fought inside the city, twice when 
Lucius Sulla gained control, and once under Cinna. No less 
cruelty had been displayed then, but now there was a brutish in- 
difference, and not even a momentary interruption in the pur- 
suit of pleasure. As if this were one more entertainment in the 
festive season, they gloated over horrors and profited by them, 



16. The rulers during 69, "the year of the four emperors." 

17. Tacitus, The Histories, iii.48; Josephus, The Jewish War, iv.x.5. 

18. Tacitus, The Histories, iii.7 1-73; Josephus, The Jewish War, iv.xi.4. 

19. F . W. Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity (Chicago and New York: 
Belfors, Clarke & Co., 1882), pp. 555f. 

406 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:12 

careless which side won and glorying in the calamities of the 
state. "2° 

Again St. J ohn draws attention to the impenitence of the 
apostates. Their response to God's judgment is only greater re- 
bellion - yet their rebellion is becoming increasingly impotent: 
And they gnawed their tongues because of pain, and they blas- 
phemed the God of heaven because of their pains and their 
sores; and they did not repent, so as to give Him glory. A distin- 
guishing mark of the Chalice-plagues is that they come all at 
once, with no "breathing space" between them. The plagues are 
bad enough one at a time, as in the judgments on Egypt. But 
these people are still gnawing their tongues and blaspheming God 
on account of their sores — the sores that came upon them when 
the First Chalice was poured out. The judgments are being 
poured out so quickly that each successive plague finds the peo- 
ple still suffering from all those that preceded it. And, because 
their character has not been transformed, they do not repent. 
The notion that great suffering produces godliness is a myth. 
Only the grace of God can turn the wicked from rebellion; but 
Israel has resisted the Spirit, to its own destruction. 

12 Corresponding to the Sixth Trumpet (9:13-21), the Sixth 
Chalice is poured out upon the great river, the Euphrates; and 
its water was dried up, that the way might be prepared for the 
kings from the rising of the sun. As we saw on 9:14, the 
Euphrates was Israel's northern frontier, from which invading 
armies would come to ravage and oppress the Covenant people. 
The image of the drying of the Euphrates for a conquering army 
is taken, in part, from a stratagem of Cyrus the Persian, who 
conquered Babylon by temporarily turning the Euphrates out of 
its course, enabling his army to march up the riverbed into the 
city, taking it by surprise. 21 The more basic idea, of course, is 
the drying up of the Red Sea (Ex. 14:21-22) and the J ordan River 
(Josh. 3:9-17; 4:22-24) for the victorious people of God. Again 
there is the underlying note of tragic irony: Israel has become 



20. Tacitus, The Histories, iii.83; trans. Kenneth Wellesley (New York: Pen- 
guin Books, 1964, 1975), pp. 197f. 

21. Herodotus, History,i.l91; see the prophecies of this in Jer. 50:38;51:32, 

36. 

407 



16:13-14 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

the new Babylon, an enemy of God that must now be conquered 
by a new Cyrus, as the true Covenant people are miraculously 
delivered and brought into their inheritance. As Barrington ob- 
serves, the coming of the armies from the Euphrates "surely rep- 
resents nothing but the return of Titus to besiege J erusalem with 
further reinforcements"; 22 and it is certainly more than coinci- 
dental that thousands of these very troops actually did come 
from the Euphrates. 23 

13-14 St. J oh n now sees three unclean spirits proceeding out 
of the mouth of the Dragon and out of the mouth of the Beast 
and out of the mouth of the False Prophet (the Land Beast of 
13:11; cf. 19:20). A connection with the second Egyptian plague 
is established here, for the multitude of frogs that infested 
Egypt came from the river (Ex. 8:1-7). St. J ohn has combined 
these images in these verses: First, an invasion from a river (v. 
12); second, a plague of frogs (in the Old Covenant dietary laws, 
frogs are unclean: Lev. 11:9-12, 41-47). But these "frogs" are 
really spirits of demons, performing signs in order to deceive 
mankind. Again there is a multiple emphasis on the Dragon (im- 
itated by his cohorts) throwing things from his mouth (cf. 
12:15-16; 13:5-6; contrast 1:16; 11:5; 19:15, 21); and the triple rep- 
etition of mouth here serves also as another point of contact 
with the Sixth Trumpet (9:17-19). These unclean spirits from the 
devil, the Roman government, and the leaders of Israel go out 
to the kings of the whole world (cf. Ps. 2) to gather them to- 
gether for the War of that great Day of God. By their false 
prophecy and miraculous works they incite the armies of the 
world to join together in war against God. What they do not 
realize is that the battle is the Lord's, and that the armies are be- 
ing brought to fulfill God's purposes, not their own. It is He 
who prepares the way for them, even drying up the Euphrates 
for their passage. 

Micaiah the prophet gave a much similar message to the evil 
king Ahab of Israel, explaining why he would be killed in battle 
against the Aramaeans: 



22. Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (London: SPCK, 
1931), p. 265. 

23. See Josephus, The Jewish War, Hi. i.3; iii.iv.2; v.i.6; vii.i.3. 

408 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:13-14 

I saw the Lord sitting on His Throne, and all the host of 
heaven standing by Him on His right and on His left. And the 
Lord said, "Who will entice Ahab to go up and fall at Ramoth- 
gilead?" And one said this while another said that. Then a spirit 
came forward and stood before the Lord and said, "I will entice 
him." And the Lord said to him, "How?" And he said, "I will go 
out and be a deceiving spirit in the mouth of all his prophets." 
Then He said, "You are to entice him and also prevail. Go and 
do so." (1 Kings 22:19-22) 

This is echoed in St. Paul's prophecy to the Thessalonians: 

For the mystery of lawlessness is already at work; only he 
who now restrains will do so until he is taken out of the way. 
And then that lawless one will be revealed whom the Lord will 
slay with the Breath of His mouth and bring to an end by the ap- 
pearance of His Coming; that is, the one whose coming is in ac- 
cordance with the activity of Satan, with all power and signs and 
false wonders, and with all the deception of wickedness among 
those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the 
truth so as to be saved. 

And for this reason God will send upon them a work of error 
so that they might believe the lie, in order that they all may be 
condemned who did not believe the truth, but took pleasure in 
wickedness. (2 Thess. 2:7-12) 

Ultimately, the "work of error" performed by these lying 
spirits is sent by God in order to bring about the destruction of 
H is enemies in the War of that great Day of God, a Biblical term 
for a Day of Judgment, of calamity for the wicked (cf. Isa. 13:6, 
9; Joel 2:1-2, 11, 31; Amos 5:18-20; Zeph. 1:14-18). Specifically, 
this is to be the Day of Israel's condemnation and execution; the 
Day, as Jesus foretold in His parable, when the King would send 
His armies to destroy the murderers and set their City on fire 
(Matt. 22:7). St. John underscores this point again by referring 
to the Lord as God the Almighty, the Greek translation of the 
Hebrew expression God of Hosts, the Lord of the armies of 
heaven and earth (cf. 1:8). The armies coming to bring about 
Israel's destruction - regardless of their motivation - are God's 
armies, sent by Him (even through lying spirits, if necessary) to 
bring about His purposes, for His glory. The evil frog-demons 
perform their false wonders and works of error because God's 
angel poured out his Chalice of wrath. 

409 



16:15 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

15 The narrative is suddenly interrupted: Behold, I am com- 
ing like a thief! This is the central theme of the Book of Revela- 
tion, summarizing Christ's warnings to the churches in the 
Seven Letters (cf. 2:5, 16, 25; 3:3, 11). The coming of the Roman 
armies will be, in reality, Christ's Coming in terrible wrath 
against His enemies, those who have betrayed Him and slain His 
witnesses. The specific wording and imagery seem to be based 
on the Letter to the church in Sardis: "I will come like a thief, 
and you will not know at what hour I will come upon you" (3:3; 
cf. Matt. 24:42-44; Luke 12:35-40; 1 Thess. 5:1-11). That Letter 
also says: "Wake up, and strengthen the things that remain, 
which were about to die; for I have not found your deeds com- 
pleted in the sight of My God. . . . But you have a few people in 
Sardis who have not soiled their garments; and they will walk 
with Me in white; for they are worthy. He who overcomes shall 
thus be clothed in white garments. ..." (3:2, 4-5). Similarly, 
the text of the Sixth Chalice continues, in Revelation's third be- 
atitude: Blessed is the one who stays awake and keeps his gar- 
ments, lest he walk about naked and men see his shame (cf. 
3:18, in the Letter to Laodicea: "I advise you to buy from Me 
. . . white garments, that you may clothe yourself, and that the 
shame of your nakedness may not be revealed"). John Sweet 
comments: "Here the tense of go naked and be seen is present 
subjunctive = 'go about naked habitually.' The danger is of being 
caught not momentarily but habitually off guard — not, to put it 
crudely, with trousers down, but without trousers at all ." 2 " 

Philip Barrington explains the origin of St. John's allusion: 
"There was an officer on duty at the Temple whose business it 
was to walk round and see that those who were on watch kept 
awake; if he found them asleep he beat them; if he found them a 
second time, he burnt their clothes. This is the only possible ex- 
planation of this passage. It means, Now is the time for those 
who are guarding the Temple to keep awake. The whole symbol- 
ism of the Sixth Bowl, therefore, of which this is a part, has to 
do with an attack on the Temple." 25 Judgment and destruction 



24. Sweet, p. 249. 

25. Barrington, pp. 265 f.; cf. Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry 
and Services As They Were at the Time of Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: Wil- 
liam B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1980), pp. 142, 148. 

410 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:16 

are approaching rapidly; there is no time left to waste. The 
churches must be awake and on the alert. 

16 The narrative is resumed: The demons gather the kings of 
earth together to the place which in Hebrew is called Armaged- 
don, 26 Literally, this is spelled Har-Magedon, meaning Mount 
Megiddo. A problem for "literalists" arises here, for Megiddo is 
a city on a plain, not a mountain. There never was or will be a 
literal "Battle of Armageddon," for there is no such place. The 
mountain nearest to the plain of Megiddo is Mount Carmel, and 
this is presumably what St. John had in mind. Why didn't he 
simply say "Mount Carmel"? Farrer answers: "One can only 
suppose that St. John wants to refer to Megiddo and to Carmel 
in one breath"2 7 — Carmel because of its association with the 
defeat of Jezebel's false prophets, and Megiddo because it was 
the scene of several important military engagements in Biblical 
history. Megiddo is listed among the conquests of Joshua (Josh. 
12:21), and it is especially important as the place where Deborah 
defeated the kings of Canaan (Jud.5:19). King Ahaziah of 
Judah, the evil grandson of King Ahab of Israel, died at Megiddo 
(2 Kings 9:27). perhaps the most significant event that took 
place there, in terms of St. J ohn's imagery, was the confronta- 
tion between J udah's King J osiah and the Egyptian Pharaoh 
Neco. In deliberate disobedience to the Word of God, J osiah 
faced Neco in battle at Megiddo and was mortally wounded (2 
Chron. 35:20-25). Following J osiah's death, J udah's downward 
spiral into apostasy, destruction, and bondage was swift and ir- 
revocable (2 Chron. 36). The J ews mourned for J osiah's death, 
even down through the time of Ezra (see 2 Chron. 35:25), and 
the prophet Zechariah uses this as an image of Israel's mourning 



26. Cf. the similar phrasing in John 19:13: "Pilate ... sat down at the judg- 
ment seat at a place called The Pavement, but in Hebrew, Gabbatha."Carring- 
ton (p. 267) comments: "Whatever may be our views about the authorship of 
the Johannine literature, it is certain that the resemblances in thought, plan, 
and diction between the Revelation and the Gospel are at times extraordinarily 
close, and those scholars who hold that they are from different authors and are 
inspired by different motives have some difficult points to explain. In the pres- 
ent case there is a contrast intended between Jesus, judged and going to his 
death at the hands of the Emperor's procurator, and Jerusalem, judged and 
going to her destruction at the hands of the Emperor." 

27. Farrer, p. 178. 

411 



16:17 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

for the Messiah: After promising to "destroy all the nations that 
come against Jerusalem" (Zech.l2:9), God says: 

And I will pour out on the house of David and on the inhab- 
itants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and of supplication, so 
that they will look on Me whom they have pierced; and they will 
mourn for Him, as one mourns for an only son, and they will 
weep bitterly over Him, like the bitter weeping over a first-born. 
In that day there will be great mourning in J erusalem, like the 
mourning of Hadadrimmon in the plain of Megiddo. And the 
Land will mourn, every family by itself. . . . (Zech. 12:10-11) 

This is then followed by God's declaration that He will re- 
move from Israel the idols, the false prophets, and the evil spir- 
its (Zech. 13), and that He will bring hostile armies to besiege 
Jerusalem (Zech. 14). 2S 

"Megiddo" thus was for St. John a symbol of defeat and des- 
olation, a "Waterloo" signifying the defeat of those who set 
themselves against God, as Farrer explains: "In sum, Mt. 
Megiddo stands in his mind for a place where lying prophecy 
and its dupes go to meet their doom; where kings and their 
armies are misled to their destruction; and where all the tribes of 
the earth mourn, to see Him in power, whom in weakness they 
had pierced." 29 

17 Finally, the seventh angel pours out his Chalice upon the 
air. The reason for this does not seem to be that the air is the do- 
main of Satan, "the prince of the power of the air" (Eph. 2:2), 
but rather that it is the element in which the lightning and thun- 
der (v. 18) and hail (v. 21) are to be produced. Again a Voice 
comes from the Temple of heaven, from the Throne, signifying 
God's control and approval. St. John told us in 15:1 that these 
seven plagues were to be "the last, because in them the wrath of 
God is finished"; with the Seventh Chalice, therefore, the Voice 



28. Barrington (pp. 268-71) provides an extensive list of St. John's allusions 
to Zechariah, observing that "next to Ezekiel it has influenced St. John most. 
It is important to realize, therefore, that it speaks of the destruction of this 
Jerusalem and a vengeance upon its inhabitants; it looks forward to the glory 
of a New Jerusalem under the house of David, and the gentiles coming to wor- 
ship there" (p. 271). 

29. Farrer, p. 178. 

412 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:18 

proclaims: It is done! (cf. 21:6). "The utterance is a single word, 
ghegonen, which is as thunderlike as the word uai is like the 
scream of an eagle (8:13). 'It is come to pass' is the seal of an ac- 
complishment, like that other one-word speech, 'It is achieved,' 
tetelestai [John 19:30], uttered by the Johannine Christ, as He 
dies upon the cross." 30 

18 Again appear the phenomena associated with the Day of 
the Lord and the covenant-making activity of the Glory-Cloud: 
flashes of lightning and peals of thunder and voices; and there 
was a great earthquake. Seven times in Revelation St. John 
mentions an earthquake (6:12; 8:5; 11:13 [twice]; 11:19; 16:18 
[twice]), emphasizing its covenantal dimensions. Christ came to 
bring the definitive earthquake, the great cosmic earthquake of 
the New Covenant, one such as there had not been since the men 
came to be upon the Land, so mighty an earthquake, and so 
great (cf. Matt. 24:21; Ex. 9:18, 24; Dan. 12:1; Joel 2:1-2). 

This was also the message of the writer to the Hebrews. 
Comparing the covenant made at Sinai with the coming of the 
New Covenant (which would be established at the destruction of 
the Temple and the complete passing of the Old Covenant), he 
said: 

See to it that you do not refuse Him who is speaking. For if 
those did not escape when they refused Him who warned them 
on earth, much less shall we escape who turn away from Him 
who warns from heaven. And His Voice shook the earth then, 
but now He has promised, saying: Yet once more I will shake not 
only the earth, but also the heaven [Hag. 2:6]. And this expres- 
sion, 'Yet once more," denotes the removing of those things that 
can be shaken, as of created things, in order that those things 
that cannot be shaken may remain. Therefore, since we receive a 
Kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us show gratitude, by which 
we may offer to God an acceptable service with reverence and 
awe; for our God is a consuming fire. (Heb. 12:25-29) 

The eminent Puritan theologian John Owen commented on 
this text about this definitive "earthquake": "It is the dealing of 
God with the church, and the alterations which he would make 



30.Farrer,p. 179. 

413 



16:19 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

in the state thereof, concerning which the apostle treats. It is 
therefore the heavens and earth of Mosaical worship, and the 
Judaical church-state, with the earth of their political state be- 
longing thereunto, that are here intended. These were they that 
were shaken at the coming of Christ, and so shaken, as shortly 
after to be removed and taken away, for the introduction of the 
more heavenly worship of the gospel, and the immovable evan- 
gelical church-state. This was the greatest commotion and alter- 
ation that God ever made in the heavens and earth of the 
church, and which was to be made once only. . . . 

"This is the conclusion of the whole argumentative part of 
this epistle, that which was aimed at from the beginning. Having 
fully proved the excellency of the gospel, and state of the church 
therein, above that under the law, and confirmed it by an ex- 
amination of all the concernments of the one and of the other, 
as we have seen; he now declares from the Scripture, according 
to his usual way of dealing with those Hebrews, that all the an- 
cient institutions of worship, and the whole church-state of the 
old covenant, were now to be removed and taken away; and 
that to make way for a better state, more glorious, and that 
which should never be obnoxious [i. e., subject] to change or 
alteration ."31 

19 As we have seen, the Great City is the Old Jerusalem, 
where the Lord was crucified (11 :8; cf. 14: 8); originally intended 
to be "the light of the world, a City set on a hill," she is now an 
apostate murderess, condemned to perish. Under the judgment 



31. John Owen, An Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews, W. H. Goold 
cd., seven vols. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1855] 1980), Vol. 7, pp. 
366f . Owen further observes: "Although the removal of Mosaical worship and 
the old church-state be principally intended, which was effected at the coming 
of Christ, and the promulgation of the gospel from heaven by him, yet all 
other oppositions unto him and his kingdom are included therein; not only 
those that then were, but all that should ensue unto the end of the world. The 
'things that cannot be moved' are to remain and be established against all op- 
position whatever. Wherefore, as the heavens and the earth of the idolatrous 
world were of old shaken and removed, so shall those also of the antichristian 
world, which at present in many places seem to prevail. All things must give 
way, whatever may be comprised in the names of heaven and earth here below, 
unto the gospel, and the kingdom of Christ therein. For if God made way for 
it by the removal of his own institutions, which he appointed for a season, 
what else shall hinder its establishment and progress unto the end?" (p. 368). 

414 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:19 

of the Seventh Chalice, she is to be split into three parts. The 
imagery is drawn from the fifth chapter of Ezekiel, in which 
God instructs the prophet to stage a drama portraying the com- 
ing destruction of Jerusalem. Ezekiel was to shave his head with 
a sharps word and then carefully divide the hair into three parts: 

One third you shall burn in the fire at the center of the city. 
. . . Then you shall take one third and strike it with the sword all 
around the city, and one third you shall scatter to the wind; and I 
will unsheathe a sword behind them. Take also a few in number 
from them and bind them in the edges of your robes. And take 
again some of them and throw them into the fire, and burn them 
in the fire; from it a fire will spread to all the house of Israel. 

Thus says the Lord God: This is J erusalem; I have set her at 
the center of the nations, with lands around her. But she has re- 
belled against My ordinances more wickedly than the nations 
and against My statutes more than the lands that surround her; 
for they have rejected My ordinances and have not walked in My 
statutes. 

Therefore, thus says the Lord God: Because you have more 
turmoil than the nations that surround you, and have not walked 
in My statutes, nor observed My ordinances, nor observed the 
ordinances of the nations that surround you; therefore, thus 
says the Lord God: Behold, 1, even 1, am against you, and I will 
execute judgments against you in the sight of the nations. And 
because of all your abominations, I will do among you what I 
have not done, and the like of which I will never do again. 
Therefore, fathers will eat their sons among you, and sons will 
eat their fathers; for I will execute judgments on you, and scatter 
all your remnant to every wind. 

So as I live, declares the Lord GOD, surely, because you have 
defiled My sanctuary with all your detestable idols and with all 
your abominations, therefore I will also withdraw, and My eye 
shall have no pity and I will not spare. One third of you will die 
by plague or be consumed by famine among you, one third will 
fall by the sword around you, and one third I will scatter to 
every wind, and I will unsheathe a sword behind them. (Ezek. 
5:1-12) 

While St. John's image of the City's division into three parts 
is clearly taken from Ezekiel, the specific referent may be that 
conjectured by Barrington: "This refers to the division into 

415 



16:19 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

three factions, which became acute after the return of Titus. 
While Titus was besieging it from without, the three leaders of 
rival factions were fighting fiercely within: but for this the city 
might have staved off defeat for a long time, even perhaps inde- 
finitely, for no-great army could support itself for long in those 
days in the neighborhood of J erusalem; there was no water and 
no supplies. This fighting within the city delivered it quickly into 
the hands of Titus; 'the days were shortened.' " 32 

Another indication that the Great City is J erusalem is the 
fact that St. J ohn distinguishes her from the cities of the Gen- 
tiles, which fell with her. Jerusalem, we must remember, was the 
capital city of the kingdom of priests, the place of the Temple; 
within her walls sacrifices and prayers were offered up for all na- 
tions. The Old Covenant system was a world-order, the founda- 
tion on which the whole world was organized and maintained in 
stability. She covenantally represented all the nations of the 
world, and in her fall they collapsed. The new organization of 
the world was to be based on the New Jerusalem, built on the 
Rock. 

And Babylon the Great (cf. on 14:8) was remembered before 
God, to give her the cup of the wine of His fierce wrath. As Ford 
observes, "the phrase suits the liturgical setting of the text. The 
libations have been poured, but instead of the memorial being a 
turning of God towards his people with grace and mercy, it is for 
judgment. God's 'remembering' is always an efficacious and cre- 
ative act, not a mere intellectual activity; he remembers in the 
act of blessing (transmitting vitality or life) and cursing (de- 
stroying). The irony of vs. 19 lies in the exhortation to Israel to 
'remember' God's covenant and kindness in general. She was es- 
pecially admonished, as in Deuteronomy 6, to keep a perpetual 
remembrance of the Exodus and Sinai events, to recall them day 
and night, and never to forget God who brought them to 
pass. . . . 

"In this chapter the author intimates that because Israel for- 
got and became arrogant, the Egyptian plagues were turned 
back on her. Even then she did not repent but blasphemed (cf. 
Job 1:22; 2:10), and God remembered her for judgment." 33 



32. Barrington, p. 266; cf. Josephus, The Jewish War, v,v.l-5. 

33. Ford, p. 275. 

416 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:20-21 

20 In this final judgment, every false refuge disappears; the 
mountains and rocks no longer can hide the wicked "from the 
face of Him who sits on the Throne, and from the wrath of the 
Lamb" (6:16): Every island fled away, and the mountains were 
not found. 

21 We have noted several times the close relationship be- 
tween Revelation and the prophecy of Ezekiel. Here again there 
is a parallel: Ezekiel declared that J erusalem's false prophets 
would bring her destruction by a violent hailstorm (Ezek. 
13:1-16). St. J ohn foretells the same fate: And great hail, about 
the weight of a talent [100 lbs.], comes down from heaven upon 
the men; and the men blasphemed God because of the plague of 
the hail, because its plague is exceedingly great. As with the 
other plagues, the imagery is borrowed from the plagues that 
Moses brought upon Egypt (in this case, the seventh plague: Ex. 
9:18-26). The plague of hailstones also calls up associations with 
"the large stones from heaven" that God threw down upon the 
Canaanites when the Land was being conquered under J oshua 
(Josh. 10:11); as Deborah sang, the very stars of heaven make 
war against the enemies of God (Jud.5:20). 

A specific historical referent of this "hailstorm" may have 
been recorded by J osephus, in his strange account of the huge 
stone missiles thrown by the Roman catapults into the city: 
'The stone missiles weighed a talent and traveled two furlongs 
or more, and their impact not only on those who were hit first, 
but also on those behind them, was enormous. At first the J ews 
kept watch for the stone - for it was white - and its approach 
was intimated to the eye by its shining surface as well as to the 
ear by its whizzing sound. Watchmen posted on the towers gave 
the warnings whenever the engine was fired and the stone came 
hurtling toward them, shouting in their native tongue: 'The Son 
is coming!' Those in the line of fire made way and fell prone, a 
precaution that resulted in the stone's passing harmlessly 
through and falling in their rear. To frustrate this, it occurred to 
the Remans to blacken the stones so that they could not be seen 
so easily beforehand; then they hit their target and destroyed 
many with a single shot." 34 

After considering various theories about the meaning of this 



34. Josephus, The Jewish War, v,vi,3. 

417 



16:21 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

phrase, Stuart Russell writes: "It could not but be well known to 
the Jews that the great hope and faith of the Christians was the 
speedy coming of the Son. It was about this very time, accord- 
ing to Hegesippus, that St. James, the brother of our Lord, pub- 
licly testified in the temple that 'the Son of Man was about to 
come in the clouds of heaven,' and then sealed his testimony 
with his blood. It seems highly probable that the Jews, in their 
defiant and desperate blasphemy, when they saw the white mass 
hurtling through the air, raised the ribald cry, 'The Son is com- 
ing,' in mockery of the Christian hope of the Parousia, to which 
they might trace a ludicrous resemblance in the strange appear- 
ance of the missile." 35 

And the men blasphemed God - their consistent reaction 
throughout the pouring out of the Chalices, revealing not only 
their wickedness but their downright stupidity: When hundred- 
pound stones are falling from heaven, it is surely the wrong time 
to commit blasphemy! But God has abandoned these men to 
their own self-destruction; their vicious, hateful rebellion con- 
sumes them to such a degree that they can depart into eternity 
with curses on their lips. 

The Chalices containing the last of the plagues have been 
poured out; but the end is not yet. The chapters that follow will 
close in on the destruction of the great Harlot-City and her 
allies, and conclude with the revelation of the glorious Bride of 
Christ: the true Holy City, New Jerusalem. (Chapters 17-22 may 
therefore be considered a continuation of the Seventh Chalice, 
or an exposition of its meaning; in any case, the events are clearly 
governed by the angels of the Chalices; see 17:1; 21:9.) "Thus the 
whole book from beginning to end teaches the great truths - 
Christ shall triumph! Christ's enemies shall be overcome! They 
who hate him shall be destroyed; they who love him shall be 
blessed unspeakably. The doom alike of Jew and of Gentile is 
already imminent. On Judea and Jerusalem, on Rome and her 
Empire, on Nero and his adorers, the judgment shall fall. Sword 
and fire, and famine and pestilence, and storm and earthquake, 
and social agony and political terror are nothing but the woes 
which are ushering in the Messianic reign. Old things are rapidly 
passing away. The light upon the visage of the old dispensation 



35. Russell, p. 482. 

418 



JUDGMENT FROM THE SANCTUARY 16:21 

is vanishing and fading into dimness, but the face of him who is 
as the sun is already dawning through the East. The new and 
final covenant is instantly to be established amid terrible judg- 
ments; and it is to be so established as to render impossible the 
continuance of the Old. Maranatha! The Lord is at hand! Even 
so come, Lord Jesus! " 3 * 



36. F. W. Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity (Chicago and New York: 
Belford, Clarke& Co., 1882), p. 557. 

419 



17 
THE FALSE BRIDE 

While some in recent years have attempted to see the Great 
Harlot of Revelation as the City of Rome, the Church through- 
out Christian history has generally understood that she is in 
some sense a False Bride, a demonic parody of the True Bride, 
the Church. The Biblical motif of the Bride falling into adultery 
(apostasy) is so well-known that such an identification is all but 
inescapable. The metaphor of harlotry is exclusively used in the 

Old Testament for a city or nation that has abandoned the Cove- 
nant and turned toward false gods; and, with only two excep- 
tions (see on v. 1-2, below), the term is always used for faithless 
Israel. The Harlot is, clearly, the False Church. At this point, 
however, agreement shatters into factionalism. To the Donatist 
heretics of the fourth century, the Catholic Church was the 
Whore. Some Greek Orthodox and Protestant theologians have 
seen her in the Roman papacy, while many fundamentalists have 
spotted her tinsel charms in the World Council of Churches. 
Although it is true that there may be (and certainly have been) 
false churches in the image of the Harlot, we must remember the 
historical context of the Revelation and the preterist demands it 
makes upon its interpreters. Merely to find some example of a 
false church and identify her as the Whore is not faithful ex- 
egesis. St. John has set our hermeneutical boundaries firmly 
within his own contemporary situation, in the first century. He 
has, in fact, stated definitely that the Harlot was a current phe- 
nomenon (17: 18), from which he expects his current readers to 
separate themselves. Whatever modern applications are made of 
this passage, we must see them as just that: applications. The 
primary significance of the vision must refer to the False Church 
of St. John's day. 

421 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

We have seen that the Book of Revelation presents us with 
two great cities, set in antithesis to each other: Babylon and 
New Jerusalem. As we shall see in a later chapter, the New Jeru- 
salem is Paradise Consummated, the community of the saints, 
the City of God. The other city, which is continually contrasted 
to the New Jerusalem, is the old Jerusalem, which has become 
unfaithful to God. Another way to view this is to understand 
that Jerusalem was intended from the beginning to be the true 
fulfillment of Babylon, a word meaning "Gate of God." The 
place of God's gracious revelation of Himself and of His cove- 
nant should be a true Babylon, a true "Gate of Heaven" and 
"House of God," as Jacob understood when he saw God's stair- 
case to heaven, the true Tower of Babel, the true pyramid which 
foretold of Jesus Christ (Gen. 28:10-22; cf. John 1:51). But Jeru- 
salem did not walk worthy of the calling with which it had been 
called. Like the original Babylon, Jerusalem turned its back on 
the true God and sought autonomous glory and dominion; like 
the original Babylon, it was apostate; and thus the "Gate of 
God" became "Confusion" instead (Gen. 11:9). 

How did the faithful City become a Harlot? It began with 
the apostasy of the priesthood in Israel. The primary responsi- 
bility of the priest (God's representative), is to re-present the 
Bridegroom to the Bride, and to guard her from danger. In- 
stead, the priesthood led the people in apostasy from their Lord 
(Matt. 26:14-15, 47, 57-68; 27:1-2, 20-25,41-43, 62-66). Because 
of the priesthood's failure to bring the Bridegroom to Israel, the 
Bride became a Harlot, in search of other husbands. The apos- 
tasy of the priesthood is described in 13:11-17, under the figure of 
the Beast from the Land. But the False Bride is not absolved of 
responsibility. She is guilty as well, and St. John's prophecy 
rightly turns now to consider her judgment and destruction.' 

The symbolic "Babylon" was destroyed when the seventh 
angel poured out his Chalice, the drink-offering of annihilation 
(16:17-21). As we have seen, this vision is part of the fourth 
Seven of Revelation - the Seven Chalices containing the seven 
plagues. The connection is provided in 17:1 (cf. 21:9), which tells 



1. The failure of the priesthood, and the consequences of this for the Bride, 
are recurring themes in Scripture. See James B. Jordan, Judges: God's War 
Against Humanism (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985). 

422 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:1-2 

us that it is one of the seven Chalice-angels who gives St. John 
the vision of the judgment of the Great Harlot. This vision, 
therefore, opens up the meaning of the Seventh Chalice, the 
destruction of Jerusalem. 

The Identity of the Harlot (17:1-7) 

1 And one of the seven angels who had the Seven Chalices 
came and spoke with me, saying: Come here, I will show 
you the judgment of the great Harlot who sits on many 
waters, 

2 with whom the kings of the earth committed fornication, 
and those who dwell on the Land were made drunk with the 
wine of her fornication. 

3 And he carried me away in the Spirit into a wilderness; and I 
saw a Woman sitting on a scarlet Beast, full of blasphemous 
names, having seven heads and ten horns. 

4 And the Woman was clothed in purple and scarlet, and 
adorned with gold and precious stones and pearls, having in 
her hand a gold cup full of abominations and of the unclean 
things of her fornication, 

5 and upon her forehead a name written: MYSTERY, BABY- 
LON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF THE HARLOTS 
AND OF THE ABOMINATIONS OF THE LAND. 

6 And I saw the woman drunk with the blood of the saints, 
and with the blood of the witnesses of J esus. And when I 
saw her, I wondered with great wonder. 

7 And the angel said to me, Why do you wonder? I will tell 
you the mystery of the Woman and of the Beast that carries 
her, which has the seven heads and the ten horns. 

1-2 The vision of the Seven Chalices continues: One of the 
seven angels who had the Seven Chalices shows St. John the fall 
of the Great Harlot who sits on many waters. St. John's readers 
have already been told of a Harlot-City named "Babylon the 
Great" (14:8; 16:19), and the Harlot's resemblance to the original 
Babylon is underscored by the information that she sits on many 
waters, an image taken from Jeremiah's description of Babylon 
in his famous oracle of judgment against her (Jer. 50-51). The 
expression many waters of Jeremiah 51:13 refers both to the 
Euphrates, which ran through the middle of the city, and to the 
canals surrounding it. Ultimately, it refers to the blessings which 

423 



17:1-2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

God had bestowed on Babylon, and which she prostituted for 
her own glory. Thus St. John describes the Great Harlot of his 
day in terms of her prototype and model. Later, in 17:15, we are 
informed of one aspect of the symbolic meaning of the "many 
waters," but for now the point is merely the identification of the 
Harlot with Babylon. 

At the same time, however, we must recognize that at every 
other point in Revelation where the expression many waters is 
used, it is set within a description of God's covenantal relation- 
ship and liturgical interaction with His people. We have noted 
that the Voice from the Glory-Cloud sounds like many waters, 
and that this Voice is produced by the innumerable angels in the 
heavenly council (Ezek. 1:24). Similarly, in Revelation 1:15 
Christ's Voice is "like the sound of many waters" (cf. Ezek. 
43:2); in 14:2 St. John again hears the Voice from heaven as "the 
sound of many waters"; and in 19:6 the great multitude of the 
redeemed, having entered the angelic council in heaven, joins in 
a song of praise, which St. John hears as "the sound of many 
waters." The expression is thus reminiscent of both God's gra- 
cious revelation and His people's liturgical response of praise 
and obedience. Given the Biblical background and context of 
the phrase, it would come as no surprise to St. John's readers 
that the Woman should be seen seated on "many waters." The 
surprise is that she is a whore. She has taken God's good gifts 
and prostituted them (Ezek. 16:6-16; Rem. 2:17-24). 

The Harlot-City has committed fornication with the kings of 
the earth. This expression is taken from Isaiah's prophecy 
against Tyre, where it primarily refers to her international com- 
merce (Isa. 23: 15-17); Nineveh as well is accused of "many har- 
lotries" with other nations (Nahum 3:4). 2 Most often, however, 
the image of a city or nation playing the harlot with the king- 
doms of the world is used in reference to the rebellious Covenant 
people. Speaking against apostate Jerusalem, Isaiah mourned: 



2. It is noteworthy that Tyre and Nineveh - the only two cities outside of 
Israel that are accused of harlotry -had both been in covenant with God. The 
kingdom of Tyre in David and Solomon's time was converted to the worship of 
the true God, and her king contracted a covenant with Solomon and assisted 
in the building of the Temple (1 Kings 5:1-12; 9:13; Amos 1:9); Nineveh was 
converted under the ministry of Jonah (Jon. 3:5-10). The later apostasy of 
these two cities could rightly be considered harlotry. 

424 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:1-2 

How the faithful City has become a Harlot, 
She who was once full of justice! 
Righteousness once lodged in her, 
But now murderers. (Isa. 1:21) 

The imagery of Israel's adultery is fairly common in the 
prophets, as they bring God's Covenant Lawsuit against the Bride 
who has abandoned her Husband. 3 Jeremiah spoke against 
Israel as the Harlot, seeking after the false gods of the heathen 
in place of her true Husband: 

For long ago I broke your yoke 

And tore off your bonds; 

But you said, "I will not serve!" 

For on every high hill 

And under every green tree 

You have lain down as a harlot. . . . 

You are a swift young camel entangling her ways, 

A wild donkey accustomed to the wilderness, 

That sniffs the wind in her passion. 

In the time of her heat who can turn her away? 

All who seek her will not become weary; 

In her month they will find her. . . . 

Your sword has devoured your prophets 

Like a destroying lion. 

O generation, hear the Word of the LoRD. 

Have I been a wilderness to Israel, 

Or a land of thick darkness? 

Why do My people say, "We are free to roam; 

We will come no more to Thee"? 

Can a virgin forget her ornaments, 

Or a Bride her attire? 

Yet My people have forgotten Me 

Days without number. 

How well you prepare your way 

To seek love! 

Therefore even the wicked women 

You have taught your ways. . . . 



3. For a brief survey of the harlot motif in Scripture, see Francis Schaeffer's 
excellent little book The Church Before the Watching World (Downers Grove, 
IL: InterVarsity Press, 1971), Chapter 2: "Adultery and Apostasy - The Bride 
and the Bridegroom Theme." 

425 



17 : 1-2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

God says, If a husband divorces his wife, 
And she goes from him 
And belongs to another man, 

Will he still return to her? 

Will not that land be completely polluted? 

But you are a harlot with many lovers; 

Yet you turn to Me, declares the Lord. 

Lift up your eyes to the bare heights and see; 

Where have you not been violated? 

By the roads you have sat for them 

Like an Arab in the desert, 

And you have polluted a land 

With your harlotry and with your wickedness. 

Therefore the showers have been withheld, 

And there has been no spring rain. 

Yet you had a harlot's forehead; 

You refused to be ashamed. (Jer. 2:20-24, 30-33; 3:1-3) 

Israel's adulteries, Hosea said, took place "on every thresh- 
ing floor" (Hos. 9:1): The picture is that of a woman prostituting 
herself for money in the grain house in harvest-time. This car- 
ries a double meaning. First, Israel was apostatizing into Baal- 
worship, seeking harvest blessing and fertility from false gods 
(forgetting that fertility, and blessing in every area, can come 
only from the one true God). Second, the Temple was built on a 
threshing floor (2 Chron. 3:1), symbolizing God's action 
throughout history in separating the chaff from His holy wheat 
(Job 21:18; Ps. 1:4; 35:5; Isa. 17:13; Luke 3:17). The threshing 
floor is also symbolic of the marriage relationship: The union of 
Boaz and Ruth took place on his threshing floor (Ruth 3), and 
the action of grinding at a mill is a Biblical image of sexual rela- 
tions (Job 31:10; Isa. 47:2; Jer. 25:10). 4 Thus, instead of consum- 
mating her marriage to God through worship at His threshing 
floor, the Bride went whoring after every other threshing floor, 
prostrating herself before strange gods and alien altars. 

Apostate Jerusalem is the Harlot-city; this theme becomes 
even more prominent in the prophecy of Ezekiel, particularly in 
Ezekiel 16 and 23, where it is clear that her "adulteries" consist 



4. For a full discussion of this point, see Calum M. Carmichael, "Treading 
in the Book of Ruth," ZA W 92 (1980), pp. 248-66. 

426 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:1-2 

of religious-political alliances with powerful heathen kingdoms 
(see, e.g., Ezek. 16:26-29). The people of Jerusalem in Ezekiel's 
day had abandoned the true faith and had turned to heathen 
gods and ungodly nations for help, rather than trusting in God 
to be their protector and deliverer. It is important to note that 
while Israel herself seems to have regarded these relationships in 
primarily political terms, the prophets emphasized that the relig- 
ious issue was central. The reliance of the Covenant nation on 
heathen powers could not be viewed as mere political expediency; 
it was nothing less than harlotry. Using language so graphic and 
explicit that most modern pastors won't preach from these 
chapters, 5 Ezekiel condemns J erusalem as a degraded, wanton 
whore: 'You spread your legs to every passerby to multiply your 
harlotry" (Ezek. 16:25). Ezekiel's sarcastic portrayal of Israel's 
adultery is sharp and vivid: She lusts after the (supposedly) well- 
endowed Egyptians, whose sex organs are the size of donkeys' 
genitals, and who produce semen in such prodigious amounts 
that it rivals that of a horse (16:26; 23:20). Her adulterous 
desire (inflamed by pornographic pictures, 23:14-16) is so great 
that she is willing to pay strangers to come to her, rather than 
the other way around (16:33-34); she even masturbates with the 
"male images" she has made (16: 17). Ezekiel's prophecy was 
crude, and he most certainly offended many of his listeners; but 
he was simply giving them a faithful description of how offen- 
sive they were to God. In the view of the all-holy God who 
spoke through Ezekiel, nothing could be more obscene than the 



5. The attitude of the Rev. H. Foster, Rector of Clerkenwell in the early 
nineteenth century, is probably representative. Discussing the propriety of 
preaching from Canticles (the Song of Solomon), he says: "I have preached 
from various independent texts in the Canticles. I once went through Ezekiel 
16, but dared not do it again." Quoted in John H. Pratt, cd., The Thought of 
the Evangelical Leaders: Notes of the Discussions of the Eclectic Society, Lon- 
don, During the Years 1798-1814 (Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 
[1856] 1978), p. 441. In a more down-to-earth age, John Calvin was able to be 
much more explicit in his lectures — so much so that his nineteenth-century 
translator simply deleted several passages, with this note: "The Reformer 
dwells so minutely on the language of the Prophet, that the refined taste of mod- 
ern days will not bear a literal translation of some clauses." Thomas Myers, in 
Calvin's Commentaries on the First Twenty Chapters of the Book of the Prophet 
Ezekiel (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1979 reprint), Vol. 2, p. 127. Cf. 
another translator's omission of Calvin's comments on Gen. 38:8-10 (Commen- 
taries on the First Book of Moses, Baker Book House, 1979, Vol. 2, p. 281). 

427 



17:3 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Bride's apostasy from her divine Husband. 

The same was true of Israel in the first century. At the very 
moment when the promised Bridegroom arrived, Israel was for- 
nicating with Caesar. The sight of her true Husband only drove 
her further into adulterous union with "the kings of the earth." 
Rejecting Christ's kingship (cf. 1 Sam. 8:7-8), the chief priests 
cried: "We have no King but Caesar!" (John 19:15). 

The apostasy of Jerusalem led the whole nation into relig- 
ious and political fornication. Those who dwell on the Land - 
the Jewish people (see comments on 3:10) - were made drunk 
with the wine of her fornication, seduced into such a spiritual 
stupor that they did not recognize their own Christ. Intoxicated 
by their apparently successful relationship with the imperial 
power-state, the Jews did not realize that it was a trap: They 
were being drugged in preparation for their own execution. 

3 We have already seen the Woman in the wilderness, where 
she fled from the oppression of the seven-headed Dragon (12:6, 
14). But that wilderness sojourn was out of necessity, and for a 
specified time. The True Bride does not dwell in the wilderness — 
the sign of the Curse, the habitation of demons (Matt. 12:43) 6 - 
by preference. To the False Bride, however, the wilderness is her 
element; she chooses to remain there rather than follow the 
Spirit to the promised land. The wilderness is thus her heritage, 
and her destiny (cf. Num. 13-14; Zech. 5:5-11). This is, again, a 
familiar prophetic picture: Apostate Jerusalem is a Harlot, ply- 
ing her obscene trade alongside wilderness roads like a wild ass 
in heat (cf. Jer. 2-3; Hos. 2). 

It is as if the Woman of Revelation 12, having fled to the wil- 
derness for protection, has become accustomed to desert life 
and established an intimate relationship with the Dragon. St. 
John sees her sitting on a scarlet Beast. It is not immediately 
clear whether the Scarlet Beast is the Dragon or the Sea Beast. 
Like the Sea Beast, it is full of blasphemous names (cf. 13:1); 
and like the Dragon, it has seven heads and ten horns (cf. 12:3; 
the order is reversed for the Sea Beast, which has ten horns and 



6. See on 12:6; cf. remarks on the wilderness theme in David Chilton, Para- 
dise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion 
Press, 1985), pp. 24, 46, 50-53. 

428 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:4 

seven heads, 13:1). Since she is seated "on many waters" (v. 1) 
and on the Scarlet Beast as well, the imagery seems to suggest 
that the Beast has risen up out of the sea (cf. 11:7; 13:1). The 
most likely solution is simply to see the passage as a reference to 
Jerusalem's apostate intimacy with both Satan and the Empire. 
Rome was the devil's reigning political incarnation, and the two 
could certainly be considered together under one image. Israel 
was dependent upon the Roman Empire for her national exist- 
ence and power; from the testimony of the New Testament there 
is no doubt that J erusalem was politically and religiously "in 
bed" with institutionalized paganism, cooperating with Rome in 
the crucifixion of Christ and the murderous persecution of 
Christians. 

Incidentally, this is one of many indications that the Harlot 
is not Rome, for she is clearly distinct from it. She is seated on 
the Beast, supported and maintained by him whose seven heads 
represent - among other things - the famed "seven hills" of 
Rome (17:9). It is worth noting too that there is a contrast be- 
tween the Throne of God, supported by the Living Creatures 
who are "full of eyes" and who are day and night engaged in 
God's praise (4:6-8; cf. Ezek. 10:12), and the Harlot Queen, 
whose throne is supported by a Beast who is full of blasphemous 
names. 

4 The Woman is clothed in purple and scarlet, garments of 
splendor and royalty for one who sits as a queen (18:7; see Jud. 
8:26; 2 Sam. 1:24; Dan. 5:7, 16, 29; Luke 16:19). She is gilded 
with gold and precious stones and pearls, in keeping with the 
Biblical descriptions of the glorious City of God (Isa. 54:11-12; 
60:5-11; Rev. 21:18-21), based further on the pattern of the jewel- 
littered Garden of Eden (Gen. 2:11-12; Ezek. 28:13). Jewelry is 
also a feature both of the high priest's garments (Ex. 28:9-29) 
and of the throne of God (4:3-4). There is thus no need to see 
the Woman's garments and jewels as merely the loud, bold, and 
extravagant decking-out of a harlot's costume. Instead, these 
are originally the clothes of the righteous Woman - the Bride - 
who is supposed to be arrayed in glorious dress (cf. Ex. 3:22; 
Ezek. 16:11-14; Prov. 31:21-22). St. J ohn wants his readers to see 
the Harlot adorned in the beautiful garments of the Church. He 
wants them to understand that this degenerate whore who forni- 

429 



17 : 5 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

cates with beasts is still carrying the trappings of the pure and 
chaste Bride. We should note, however, that the enormous veil 
covering the Temple gate (over 80 feet high and 24 feet wide) 
was "a Babylonian tapestry, embroidered with blue, and fine 
linen [cf. 18:16], and scarlet, and purple" 1 

The False Bride celebrates a communion of sorts: She holds 
in her hand a gold cup full of abominations and of the unclean 
things of her fornication, combining the images of unclean food 
(cf. Lev. 11) and unclean marriage (cf. Lev. 20; see esp. Lev. 
20:22-26). 8 The picture is slightly changed from that of Jere- 
miah 51:7, where the original Babylon is described as "a golden 
cup in the hand of the Lord, intoxicating all the earth," but the 
basic idea is similar. Jerusalem still has the beautiful chalice of 
the Covenant, but the communion she offers leads men to death 
and destruction. Her cup is full of "abominations, " a word 
which the Bible often uses in connection with the worship of 
false gods (Deut. 29:17; Ezek. 5:11). Pharisaic Jerusalem prides 
itself on its observance of the ceremonial cleanliness regula- 
tions, but in reality it is radically unclean, defiled from within by 
its apostasy and fornication (Matt. 23:25-28; Mark 7:1-23). The 
overall picture may well be, as Ford has observed, "a parody of 
the high priest on the Day of Atonement wearing the vestments 
specially reserved for that occasion and holding the libation 
offering. However, instead of the sacred name upon his brow 
the 'priest-harlot' bears the name Babylon, mother of harlots 
and the abominations of the earth, a title illustrating Ezek. 
16:43-45 [RSV], where Yahweh speaks of the lewdness of Jeru- 
salem." 9 

5 The Harlot has on her forehead a name written. By now 
the writing on the forehead is a familiar image in Revelation. We 
have seen it on the saints (3:12; 7:3; 14:1) and on the followers of 



7. Josephus, The Jewish War, v.v,4. 

8. For an extended, though preliminary, discussion of the relationships be- 
tween culinary and sexual purity in the Law, see Mary Douglas, Purity and 
Danger: An Analysis of the Concepts of Pollution and Taboo (London: Rout- 
ledge & Kegan Paul, [1966] 1969), Ch. 3: "The Abominations of Leviticus" (pp. 
41-57); idem, Implicit Meanings: Essays in Anthropology (London: Routledge 
& Kegan Paul, 1975), Ch. 16: "Deciphering a Meal" (pp. 249-75). 

9. J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: A New Translation with Introduction 
and Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1975), p. 288. 

430 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:6-7 

the Beast (13 :16-17). The forehead is especially singled out as a 
symbol of rebellion (Isa. 48:4; Ezek. 3:9); rebellious Israel is 
said to have "a harlot's forehead" (Jer. 3:3). But the name writ- 
ten there begins with the word Mystery. Corsini has properly 
noted the significance of this much-overlooked fact: "If the 
prostitute is called 'mystery,' that means that she, even in the 
moment in which she is judged and condemned, still forms an 
integral and important part in the divine plan of salvation. This 
cannot be the case for Rome or any other pagan city, but only 
for Jerusalem. Only she, and no other city, will be renewed and 
will descend from heaven upon Mt. Sion to celebrate a marriage 
with the Lamb (21:2, 10ff.), because 'in the days of the trumpet 
call to be sounded by the seventh angel, the mystery of 
God ... should be fulfilled' (10:7 )." 10 

The Harlot's symbolic name continues: Babylon the Great, 
for she is heiress and namesake of the ancient city which was the 
epitome of rebellion against God (Gen. 11:1-9; Jer. 50-51). The 
name also serves to remind us of her high calling, that she was 
created to be the True Babylon, the Gate of God. Instead, how- 
ever, she has followed the path of the old Babylon in her apos- 
tate rejection of God's lordship over her. Now identified with 
bestiality and confusion, she has become "the Mystery of Law- 
lessness" (2 Thess. 2:7), the Mother of Harlots (corresponding to 
"Jezebel" and her "children," spoken of in 2:20-23; cf. the de- 
scription of Jerusalem as a mother of harlots in Ezek. 16:44-48). 

6-7 Now we see what the Harlot has in her cup, the demonic 
communion with which she and her paramours (v. 2; cf. 14:8) 
are becoming drunk: It is the blood of the saints, and ... of 
the witnesses of Jesus. This is "the wine of her fornication," the 
sacrament of her apostasy from the true faith; the ultimate un- 
clean food (cf. Lev. 17:10-14). While it is true that Rome became 
a great persecutor of the Church, we must remember that Jeru- 
salem was the preeminent transgressor in this regard. The 
Roman persecution came about through the Jews' instigation 
and connivance, as the Book of Acts constantly informs us. 
Jerusalem's whole history, in fact, was one of relentless persecu- 



10. Eugenio Corsini, The Apocalypse: The Perennial Revelation of Jesus 
Christ (Wilmington, DE: Michael Glazier, 1983), p. 335. 

431 



17:6-7 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

tion of the godly, and especially of the prophets (Matt. 21:33-44; 
23:29-35; Acts 7:51-53). As St. J ohn tells us in 18:24, "in her was 
found the blood of prophets and of saints and of all who have 
been slain on the earth." J erusalem was the persecutor of the 
prophets par excellence. 

But it is not always easy to look at things with "theological" 
eyes. At the moment of her glory, a successful harlot is beauti- 
ful, alluring, seductive. God's Word is realistic, and does not 
pretend that evil always appears repulsive. The temptation to 
sin, as we all know, can be very attractive (Gen. 3:6; 2 Cor. 
11:14). As St. John beheld the Great Harlot, therefore, he was 
quite taken in, fascinated with her beauty: He wondered with 
great wonder (cf. Rev. 13:3-4: "And the whole Land wondered 
after the Beast; and they worshiped the Dragon . . . "). The 
angel therefore rebukes him: Why do you wonder? St. John 
records this to warn his readers against being seduced by the 
Harlot, for she is beautiful and impressive. The antidote to be- 
ing deceived by the wiles of the False Bride is to understand the 
Mystery of the Woman and of the Beast that carries her. The 
angel will now reveal the nature of the Harlot's alliance with the 
Beast, her opposition to Christ, and her approaching destruc- 
tion. St. John's readers must understand that there is no longer 
any hope of "reform from within ." Jerusalem is implacably at 
war with Jesus Christ and His people. The once-Holy City is 
now a Whore. 

The Angel Explains the Mystery (17:8-18) 

8 The Beast that you saw was and is not, and is about to as- 
cend out of the Abyss and to go to destruction. And those 
who dwell on the Land will wonder, whose name has not 
been written in the Book of Life from the foundation of the 
world, when they see the Beast, that he was and is not and 
will come. 

9 Here is the mind which has wisdom. The seven heads are 
seven mountains on which the Woman sits, 

10 and they are seven kings; five have fallen, one is, the other 
has not yet come; and when he comes, he must remain a lit- 
tle while. 

1 1 And the Beast which was and is not, is himself also an 
eighth, and is of the seven, and he goes to destruction. 

432 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:8 

12 And the ten horns which you saw are ten kings, who have 
not yet received a kingdom, but they receive authority as 
kings with the Beast for one hour. 

13 These have one purpose and they give their power and au- 
thority to the Beast. 

14 These will wage war against the Lamb, and the Lamb will 
overcome them, because He is Lord of lords and King of 
kings, and those who are with Him are the called and chosen 
and faithful. 

15 And he said to me: The waters which you saw, where the 
Harlot sits, are peoples and multitudes and nations and 
tongues. 

16 And the ten horns which you saw, and the Beast, these will 
hate the harlot and will make her desolate and will make her 
naked, and will eat her flesh and will burn her up with fire. 

17 For God has put it into their hearts to execute His purpose, 
to execute one purpose, and to give their kingdom to the 
Beast, until the words of God should be fulfilled. 

18 And the Woman whom you saw is the Great City, which has 
a Kingdom over the kings of the earth. 

8 The angel begins his explanation by speaking about the 
Beast, since the Harlot's intimacy with the Beast is so integral to 
her character and destiny. Again, we must note that this is a 
composite Beast (cf. v. 3 above), comprising the attributes of 
both the Roman Empire and its original, the Dragon. Milton 
Terry says: "In his explanation the angel seems to point our at- 
tention particularly to the spirit which actuated the dragon, the 
beast from the sea, and the false prophet alike; and so what is 
here affirmed of the beast has a special reference to the different 
and successive manifestations of Satan himself. . . . Hence we 
understand by the beast that was and is not an enigmatical por- 
traiture of the great red dragon of 12:3. He is the king of the 
Abyss in 9:11, and the beast that killed the witnesses in 11:7. He 
appears for a time in the person of some great persecutor, or in 
the form of some huge iniquity, but is after a while cast out. 
Then he again finds some other organ for his operations and en- 
ters it with all the malice of the unclean spirit who wandered 
through dry places, seeking rest and finding none until he dis- 

433 



17:8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

covered his old house, empty, swept, and garnished as if to in- 
vite his return." 11 

The angel represents the Beast as a parody of "Him who is 
and who was and who is to come" (1:4): The Beast . . . was and 
is not and is about to ascend up out of the Abyss. At this point, 
it is likely that the specific human referent of the Beast is Vespa- 
sian, who became Caesar after the chaos which followed upon 
the death of Nero. Ford comments: "The beast 'was' (Vespasian 
was in favor with Nero) and 'is not' (he fell from favor) and will 
come from the abyss (he was restored with the help of the 'men 
of the pit,' an epithet for perverse men from Qumran). Vespa- 
sian stands parallel to 'he who is to come.' In a sense the empire 
passed through the same stages; 'it was,' from Caesar to Nero, 
'was not' in the critical year of the four emperors, and came 
again with Vespasian." 12 

Ultimately, as we have seen, this is a description of the origi- 
nal Beast, the Dragon, the ancient enemy of God and His peo- 
ple. If at the moment there is a temporary respite from his cruel 
opposition, the Christians must be aware that he is about to as- 
cend again out of the Abyss to attack and persecute them again; 
nevertheless, St. John reminds them that the Beast's defeat is 
assured, for his ascension is not to power and glory at the right 
hand of God, but only in order to go to destruction. The word 
destruction is apoleian, the root of Apollyon, the "king of the 
Abyss" in 9:11. St. John is pointing out that although the Beast 
is allowed, for a time, to ascend out of the abyss, he is just as 
certain to return there. His destiny is utter destruction, and he 
cannot succeed in destroying the Church. 

But the Dragon/Beast will be successful in carrying off apos- 
tate Israel into his idolatrous cult. Those who dwell on the Land 
will wonder . . . when they see the Beast, that he was and is not 
and will come. The word used earlier for the Beast's rise from 
the Abyss is anabaino/m mimicry of Christ's Resurrection/ 
Ascension; the word come here is paristemi (the verb form of 
parousia), in imitation of Christ's Coming in power and glory, 
bringing judgment and salvation (the definitive Parousia 



11. Milton S. Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic: A Study of the Most Notable 
Revelations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: 
Eaton & Mains, 1898), pp. 429f. 

12. Ford, p. 289. 

434 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:9-10 

occurred at the Ascension, resulting in Christ's Parousia against 
Jerusalem in a,d. 70). Thus, just as the first-century Christians 
lived in expectation of their Lord's near Parousia, so the apes, 
tate Jews looked to the Beast for deliverance and salvation. The 
"second coming" of the Dragon, after his apparent (and real) 
defeat by Christ, was an occasion of wonder, astonishment, and 
worship by the Christ-rejecting Jews. The rise of the total state, 
in opposition to the Kingdom of Christ, was for rebellious Israel 
an ascension to glory, a parousia, a day of the lord. The Beast 
was their Messiah, and his Anti-Parousia delivered them — into 
the hands of Apollyon, the perdition and destruction of the 
Abyss. The only ultimate issue of the Beast's ascension from the 
Abyss is the greater damnation of himself and his worshipers. 
Why, ultimately, did the Jews reject Christ and worship the 
Dragon? Because, in contrast to Christ's elect, who were 
"chosen in Him before the foundation of the world" (Eph.l:4) 
apostate Israel's name has not been written in the Book of Life 
from the foundation of the world (cf. 13:8). St. Peter wrote that 
J esus Christ, the great Cornerstone, was for the J ews "a Stone 
of stumbling and a rock of offense; for they stumble because 
they are disobedient to the Word, and to this doom they were 
also appointed" (1 Peter 2:8). 13 Instead, the Church has inher- 
ited the former status (Ex. 19:6) held by Israel: "But you are a 
chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for 
God's own possession ..." (1 Pet. 2:9). 

9-10 The angel turns to speak of the Dragon's incarnation in 
the Beast from the Sea. Here is the mind which has wisdom. The 
seven heads are seven mountains on which the woman sits. The 
"seven mountains" again identify the Beast as Rome, famous 



13. In context (v. 6-8), St. Peter is quoting from Isaiah's prophecies of the 
Jews' rejection of Christ (Isa. 8:14; 28:16; see Matt. 28:12-15). John Brown of 
Edinburgh commented on 1 Peter 2:8: "The direct reference in the term dis- 
obedient is, no doubt, to the unbelieving Jews. When God proclaimed to 
them, 'Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious 
corner-stone, a sure foundation; he that believeth shall not make haste,' - they 
disbelieved the declaration. They disobeyed the command. They rejected the 
stone. They would not build on it. They would not receive Jesus as the Mes- 
siah; on the contrary, they 'took him, and with wicked hands they crucified 
and slew him.'" (Expository Discourses on 1 Peter, two vols.; Edinburgh: The 
Banner of Truth Trust, [1848] 1975, Vol. 1, p. 314). 

435 



17:11 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

for its "seven hills"; 14 but these also correspond to the line of the 
Caesars, for they are seven kings; five have fallen: The first five 
Caesars were Julius, Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, and Claud- 
ius. 15 One is: Nero, the sixth Caesar, was on the throne as St. 
John was writing the Revelation. The other has not yet come; 
and when he comes, he must remain a little while: Galba, the 
seventh Caesar, reigned for less than seven months. 

11 But the fall of the Julio-Claudian dynasty and the severe 
political chaos at Lending it must not be interpreted by Christians 
to mean the end of troubles. For their real enemy is the Beast, 
who will become incarnated in other Caesars as well. He is also 
an eighth king, yet is of the seven: the antichristian brutality of 
succeeding tyrants will mark them as being of the same stripe as 
their predecessors. Eight is the number of resurrection in the 
Bible; St. John is warning that even though the Empire will 
seem to disintegrate after the rule of the seven kings, it will be 
"resurrected" again, to live on in other persecutors of the 
Church. Yet the Empire's comeback will not result in victory for 
the Beast, for even the eighth, the resurrected Beast, goes to de- 



14. It is not at all necessary, with Russell (The Parousia,p. 492), to seek 
seven mountains in Jerusalem as the fulfillment of this statement. The Harlot 
is seated on the Beast, and thus on the seven hills of Rome; in other words, 
apostate Judaism, centered in the City of Jerusalem, is supported by the 
Roman Empire. 

15. This has been called into question by some, since, in a technical sense, 
the Empire began with Augustus, not Julius (cf. Tacitus, The Annals, i.l). Yet 
that was a technicality which, as far as the normal conversation and writing of 
the first century were concerned, was irrelevant. For all practical purposes, 
Julius Caesar was Emperor: He claimed the title imperator, and most early 
Roman, Christian, and Jewish writers count him as the first Emperor. 
Suetonius begins his Lives of the Twelve Caesars with Julius as the first Em- 
peror, as does Dio Cassius in his Roman History. Book 5 of the Sibylline 
Oracles calls Julius "the firstking," and 4 Ezra 12:15 speaks of Augustus as "the 
second" of the emperors. For our purposes, Josephus seems to provide the 
most convincing testimony, since he wrote for both a Roman and a Jewish au- 
dience, in the common parlance of the day. In his Antiquities of the Jews he 
clearly speaks of Augustus and Tiberius as the second and third emperors 
(xviii. ii. 2), of Caligula as the fourth (xviii.vi.10), and of Julius as the first 
(xix. i. 11). The most extensive discussion of all the evidence is in Moses Stuart, 
Commentary on the Apocalypse, two vols. (Andover: Allen, Merrill, and 
Wardwell, 1845), Vol. 2, pp. 445-52; cf. IsbonT. Beckwith, The Apocalypse of 
John: Studies in Introduction with an Exegetical and Critical Commentary 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1919] 1979), pp. 701f. 

436 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:12-14 

Struction. The Church will have to exercise patience during the 
period of the Beast's ascendancy, but she has the assurance that 
her enemies will not succeed. Their King will be victorious; His 
servants have been predestined to share in His triumph. 

12 The ten horns which St. J ohn saw on the Beast are ten 
kings. The number iOinthe Bible, as we have noted on other oc- 
casions, is related to the concept of "manyness," of quantitative 
or numerical fullness. That these "kings" are associated with the 
Beast, adorning his heads as "crowns," and that they receive au- 
thority with the Beast (i.e., by virtue of their relationship with 
him) indicates that they are rulers subject to, or allied with, the 
Empire. Rome actually had ten imperial provinces, and some 
have read this as a reference to them. 16 It is not necessary, how- 
ever, to attempt a precise definition of these ten subject kings; 
the symbol simply represents "the totality of those allied or sub- 
ject kings who aided Rome in her wars both on J udaism and 
Christianity." 17 The burden of the text is to point to these kings, 
with whom the Harlot has plied her trade (v. 2), as the instru- 
ments of her eventual destruction (v. 16-17). 

13-14 St. John records that the "ten kings" join with the 
Beast against Christ, persecuting the Church throughout the 
provinces and subordinate kingdoms of the Empire: These have 
one purpose, and they give their power and authority to the 
Beast in order to wage war against the Lamb, as Michael and His 
angels had waged war with the Dragon (12:7). This has always 
been the ultimate goal of reprobate man's exercise of govern- 
ment: the attempt to dethrone God. As the Psalmist foretold, 
"The kings of the earth take their stand, and the rulers take 
counsel together, against the Lord and against His Christ" (Ps. 
2:2; cf. Acts 2:26). The apostolic commentary on this text is re- 
vealed in an early prayer of the persecuted Church. After quot- 
ing Psalm 2, they said: "For truly in this city there were gathered 
together against Thy holy servant Jesus, whom Thou didst 



16. These were: Italy, Achaia, Asia, Syria, Egypt, Africa, Spain, Gaul, Brit- 
ain, and Germany. See F. W. Farrar,77*e Early Days of Christianity (Chicago 
and New York: Belford, Clarke & Co., 1882), p. 532. 

17. Terry, p. 433. 

437 



17:13-14 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

anoint, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles 
and the peoples of Israel, to do whatever Thy hand and Thy 
purpose predestined to occur" (Acts 4:27-28). The ungodly are 
united in the bond of hatred against the Son of God, the 
Anointed One. That is why we are told the outcome of the con- 
spiracy of Herod and Pilate against Christ: "Now Herod and 
Pilate became friends with one another that very day; for before 
they had been at enmity with one another" (Luke 23:12). Ene- 
mies will unite in fighting a common foe, and in the Advent of 
Christ we see the world of pagans and apostates joining together 
in rebellion against Him. But the Psalmist long before had 
warned kings and rulers to "worship the Lord with reverence, 
and rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son, lest He become angry, 
and you perish in the way, for His wrath may soon be kindled. 
How blessed are all who take refuge in Him!" (Ps. 2:11-12). The 
outcome of this cosmic struggle is thus assured, and inevitable: 
And the Lamb will overcome them, because He is Lord of lords 
and King of kings, and those who are with Him are the called 
and chosen and faithful. St. J ohn assures the Church that in 
their terrible and terrifying conflict with the awesome might of 
imperial Rome, the victory of Christianity is guaranteed. 

15 The angel now explains the significance of the waters . . . 
where the Harlot sits. These are described in terms of a fourfold 
designation: peoples and multitudes and nations and tongues, 
i.e. the world. The identification of the ungodly, rebellious na- 
tions of the world with the raging sea is a familiar one in Scrip- 
ture (cf. 13:1). Isaiah wrote of "the uproar of many peoples who 
roar like the roaring of the seas, and the rumbling of nations 
who rush on like the rumbling of mighty waters ! The nations 
rumble on like the rumbling of many waters, but He will rebuke 
them and they will flee far away, and be chased like chaff in the 
mountains before the wind, or like whirling dust before a gale" 
(Isa. 17:12-13). "The wicked are like the tossing sea; for it cannot 
be quiet, and its waters toss up refuse and mud. There is no 
peace for the wicked, says my God" (Isa. 57:20-21). 

Jerusalem could truly be portrayed as seated on "many 
waters" (i. e., the nations) because of the great and pervasive in- 
fluence the Jews had in all parts of the Roman Empire before 
the destruction of Jerusalem. Their synagogues were in every 

438 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:16 

city, and the extent of their colonization can be seen in the 
record of the Day of Pentecost, which tells us that "there were 
Jews staying in Jerusalem, devout men, from every nation under 
heaven" (Acts 2:5). '8 

16 In their war against Christ, the raging nations turn 
against the Harlot, because of her connection with Him. 19 The 
angel portrays this new enmity toward the Harlot by a fourfold 
description: The peoples of the Empire will hate the Harlot and 
will make her desolate and will make her naked, and will eat her 
flesh and burn her up with fire (cf. J er. 13:26; Lam. 1:8-9; Nab. 
3:5). J erusalem had committed fornication with the heathen na- 
tions, but in A.D. 70 they turned against her and destroyed her, 
making her desolate (the same word is used in Matthew 24:15/ 
Mark 13:14, and Luke 21:20, reflecting the Greek version of 
Daniel 9:26-27: the abomination of desolation). One of the pun- 
ishments for a convicted adulteress in the ancient world was the 
public humiliation of being stripped naked (cf. Isa. 47:2-3; Jer. 
13:26; Lam. 1:8; Ezek. 16:37, 39; 23:29; Hos. 2:10; Nab. 3:5). 
Another connection with "Jezebel" (2:20; cf. on 17:5) is 
made here: The nations eat her flesh, as the dogs (cf. 22:15) had 
eaten the flesh of the original Jezebel (1 Kings 21:23-24; 2 Kings 
9:30-37). The prophets who spoke of Jerusalem as the Whore 
had said that just as a priest's daughter who became a harlot was 
to be "burned with fire" (Lev. 21:9), so God would use Jeru- 
salem's former "lovers," the heathen nations, to destroy her and 
burn her to the ground (Jer. 4:11-13, 30-31; Ezek. 16:37-41; 
23:22, 25-30). Russell observed that "Tacitus speaks of the bitter 
animosity with which the Arab auxiliaries of Titus were filled 
against the Jews, 20 and we have a fearful proof of the intense 



18. Luke goes on to list some of these nationalities: "Parthians and Medes 
and Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus 
and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the districts of Libya around 
Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and 
Arabs" (Acts 2:9-11). 

19. The destruction of the Harlot by her former "lovers" is inexplicable 
apart from the hypothesis that she is Jerusalem. There is clearly a contextual 
connection between the nations' war against Christ and their war against the 
Harlot. Their opposition is, first and foremost, against Him; their destruction 
of her is represented as an aspect of their attempt to destroy Him. 

20. Cornelius Tacitus, The Histories, v. 1. 

439 



17:16 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

hatred felt towards the J ews by the neighboring nations in the 
wholesale massacres of that unhappy people perpetrated in 
many great cities JUSt before the outbreak of the war. The whole 
Jewish population of Caesarea were massacred in one day. In 
Syria every City was divided into two camps, Jews and Syrians. 
In Scythopolis upwards of thirteen thousand Jews were butch- 
ered; in Ascalon, Ptolemais, and Tyre, similar atrocities took 
place. But in Alexandria the carnage of the Jewish inhabitants 
exceeded all the other massacres. The whole Jewish quarter was 
deluged with blood, and fifty thousand corpses lay in ghastly 
heaps in the Streets. 21 This is a terrible commentary on the 
words of the angel-interpreter: 'The ten horns which thou saw- 
est upon the beast, these shall hate the whore,' etc." 22 

It is important to realize, as we noted above, that the Beast 
destroyed Jerusalem as part of his war against Christ; the 
Roman leaders' motive in destroying the Temple was not only to 
put down the Jewish rebellion, but to obliterate Christianity, as 
SlllpitillS Severus recorded: 

Titus is said, after calling a council, to have first deliberated 
whether he should destroy the temple, a structure of such extra- 
ordinary work. For it seemed good to some that a sacred edifice, 
distinguished above all human achievements, ought not to be de- 
stroyed, inasmuch as, if preserved, it would furnish an evidence 
of Roman moderation, but, if destroyed, would serve for a per- 
petual proof of Roman cruelty. But on the opposite side, others 
and Titus himself thought that the temple ought specially to be 
overthrown, in order that the religion of the J ews and of the 
Christians might more thoroughly be subverted; for that these 
religions, although contrary to each other, had nevertheless pro- 
ceeded from the same authors; that the Christians had sprung up 
from among the J ews; and that, if the root were extirpated, the 
offshoot would speedily perish. 23 



21. Josephus, The Jewish War, ii.xviii. 

22. J. Stuart Russell, The Parousia: A Critical Inquiry into the New Testa- 
ment Doctrine of Our Lord's Second Coming (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, [1887] 1983), p. 503. 

23. The Sacred History of Sulpitius Severus, in A Select Library ofNicene 
and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 
[n.d.] 1973), Second Series, Vol. 11, p. 111. This information from Sulpitius 
seems to have been derived from Tacitus's record of eyewitness accounts. See 
Michael Grant, The Twelve Caesars (New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 
1975), pp. 228f. 

440 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:17 

The Beast thought that he could kill the Whore and the 
Bride in one stroke! But when the dust settled, the scaffolding of 
old, apostate J erusalem lay in ruins, and the Church was re- 
vealed as the new and most glorious Temple, God's eternal 
dwelling place. 

17 The sovereign Lord is thus not at the mercy of the Beast 
and his minions; rather, all these events have been predestined 
for God's glory, through the execution of His decrees. For God 
has put it into their hearts to execute His purpose by having a 
common purpose, and by giving their kingdom to the Beast. 
Obviously, it is a sin for these kings to give their kingdoms to the 
Beast, for the purpose of making war against the Lamb. And 
yet it is God who put it into their hearts! Some will complain, of 
course, that this makes God "the Author of sin." The obvious 
answer to such an objection is that the text says that God placed 
the evil purpose into their hearts; at the same time, we are 
assured that "the Lord is righteous in all His ways." If we 
believe the Bible, we must believe both Revelation 17:17 and 
Psalm 145:17. We must hold firmly to two (seemingly contradic- 
tory) points: First, God is not responsible for sin; Second, noth- 
ing happens in spite of Him, or in opposition to His purpose. 24 
Thus, to those who fight against the Word of God, the Biblical 
response is blunt: "On the contrary, who are you, O man, who 
answers back to God? The thing molded will not say to the 
molder, 'Why did you make me like this,' will it? Or does not the 



24. These seem contradictory to us because we are creatures. Problems such 
as the relationship of God's sovereignty and human responsibility, or of God's 
sovereignty and God's righteousness, or of unity and diversity within the Trin- 
ity, cannot be "solved" by us because we are not capable of comprehending 
God. Cornelius Van Til writes: "Human knowledge can never be completely 
comprehensive knowledge. Every knowledge transaction has in it somewhere a 
reference point to God. Now since God is not fully comprehensible to us we 
are bound to come into what seems to be contradiction in all our knowledge. 
Our knowledge is analogical and therefore must be paradoxical" (The Defense 
of the Faith, Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed, third revised ed., 1967, 
p. 44). For this reason, "all teaching of Scripture is apparently contradictory" 
(Common Grace and the Gospel, Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed, 
1972, p. 142; cf. pp. 9ff.; cf. Van Til's Introduction to Systematic Theology, 
Presbyterian and Reformed, pp. 247 ff.). For a full consideration of this mat- 
ter, see John Frame, "The Problem of Theological Paradox," in Gary North, 
ed., Foundations of Christian Scholarship (Vallecito, CA: Ross House Books, 
1976), pp. 295-330. 

441 



17 : 18 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

potter have a right over the clay, to make from the same lump 
one vessel for honor, and another vessel for dishonor?" (Rem. 
9:20-21). St. Augustine observed: "It is, therefore, in the power 
of the wicked to sin; but that in sinning they do this or that is 
not in their power, but in God's, who divides the darkness and 
regulates it; so that hence even what they do contrary to God's 
will is not fulfilled except it be God'swill." 25 

The whole purpose for the heathen kings' wrath, for their 
joining in conspiracy against both the Bride and the Harlot, for 
their surrendering their kingdoms to the Beast and receiving 
power for one hour with him, is now revealed. God has put it 
into their hearts to fulfill His purpose, until the words of God 
should be fulfilled. The war between Christ and the Beast, cul- 
minating in the desolation of the Harlot, took place in fulfill- 
ment of God's announcements through His prophets. The 
curses of the Covenant (Deut. 28) were executed on Israel 
through the Beast and the ten horns. They were the instruments 
of God's wrath, as Christ had foretold in His discourse on the 
Mount of Olives. During these horrifying "days of vengeance," 
He said, all things that were written would be fulfilled (Luke 
21:22). Vision and prophecy would be sealed and completed in 
the destruction of the old world order (Dan. 9:24). 

18 The angel now identifies the Harlot as the Great City, 
which, as we have seen, St. J ohn uses as a term for J erusalem, 
where the Lord was crucified (11 :8; 16: 19). Moreover, says the 
angel, this City has a Kingdom over all the kings of the earth. It 
is perhaps this verse, more than any other, which has confused 
expositors into supposing, against all other evidence, that the 
Harlot is Rome. If the City is Jerusalem, how can she be said to 
wield this kind of worldwide political power? The answer is that 
Revelation is not a book about politics; it is a book about the 
Covenant. J erusalem did reign over the nations. She did possess 
a Kingdom which was above all the kingdoms of the world. She 
had a COVenantal priority over the kingdoms of the earth. Israel 
was a Kingdom of priests (Ex. 19:6), exercising a priestly minis- 



25. St. Augustine, Anti-Pelagian Works, Peter Holmes and Robert Ernest 
Wallis, trans. (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, reprinted 1971), p. 514, 
italics added; cf. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ii.iv.4. 

442 



THE FALSE BRIDE 17:18 

try of guardianship, instruction, and intercession on behalf of 
the nations of the world. When Israel was faithful to God, offer- 
ing up sacrifices for the nations, the world was at peace; when 
Israel broke the Covenant, the world was in turmoil. The Gen- 
tile nations recognized this (1 Kings 10:24; Ezra 1; 4-7; cf. Rem. 
2:17-24). 26 Yet, perversely, they would seek to seduce Israel to 
commit whoredom against the Covenant - and when she did, 
they would turn on her and destroy her. That pattern was re- 
peated several times over until Israel's final excommunication in 
A.D. 70, when J erusalem was destroyed. The desolation of the 
Harlot was God's final sign that the Kingdom had been trans- 
ferred to His new people, the Church (Matt. 21:43; 1 Pet. 2:9; 
Rev. 11:19; 15:5; 21:3). The Kingdom over the kingdoms will 
never again be possessed by national Israel. 



26. Josephus points out repeatedly that the nations had historically recog- 
nized the sanctity and centrality of the Temple: "This celebrated place . . . was 
esteemed holy by all mankind" (The Jewish War, v.i.3; cf. v.ix.4;v.xiii.6).In 
fact, the action of Jewish rebels, in the summer of a.d. 66, of halting the daily 
sacrifices for the Emperor (in violation, Josephus points out, of long-standing 
practice) was the single event which finally precipitated the Roman war against 
the Jews (ii.xvii.2-4). Even at the very end, as Titus prepared to raze the city to 
the ground, he was still pleading with the Jewish priests to offer up the sacri- 
fices, which by now had been entirely discontinued (vi.ii.l). 

443 



18 
BABYLON IS FALLEN! 

Come Out of Her! (18:1-8) 

1 After these things I saw another Angel coming down from 
heaven, having great authority, and the earth was illumined 
with His glory. 

2 And He cried out with a mighty voice, saying: Fallen, Fallen 
is Babylon the great! And she has become a dwelling place 
of demons and a prison of every unclean spirit, and a prison 
of every unclean and hateful bird. 

3 For all the nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of 
her fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed 
fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth have 
become rich by the wealth of her sensuality. 

4 And I heard another voice from heaven, saying: Come out 
of her, My people, that you may not participate in her sins 
and that you may not receive of her plagues; 

5 for her sins have piled up as high as heaven, and God has re- 
membered her iniquities. 

6 Pay her back even as she has paid, and give back double ac- 
cording to her deeds; in the cup which she has mixed, mix 
twice as much for her. 

7 To the degree that she glorified herself and lived sensuously, 
to the same degree give her torment and mourning; for she 
says in her heart: I sit as a queen and am not a widow, and 
will never see mourning. 

8 For this reason in one Day her plagues will come, pestilence 
and mourning and famine, and she will be burned up with 
fire; for strong is the Lord God who judges her. 

1 St. J ohn is now introduced to another Angel - probably 
the Lord Jesus Christ, considering the description of Him, com- 
pared with statements about Christ in St. John's Gospel: He 

445 



18:2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

comes down from heaven (John 3:13, 31; 6:38, 58), He has great 
authority (John 5:27; 10:18; 17:2), and the earth was illumined 
with His glory (John 1:4-5,9, 14; 8:12; 9:5; 11:9; 12:46; cf. 1 Tim. 
6:16). The expressions parallel those in 10:1, which, as we have 
seen, are clearly speaking of the Son of God. The last phrase is 
virtually a repetition of Ezekiel 43:2, where it says of God that 
"the earth shone with His glory." Christ Himself, who brings the 
wrath of god upon the Harlot-City, comes to proclaim her judg- 
ment. The destruction of the covenant apostates manifests His 
authority and glory in the Land. 

2 The proclamation of God's Messenger is consistent (cf. 
14:8): Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great! Her doom is certain, 
and thus is spoken of as already completed. This is similar to the 
funeral dirge Amos sang against Israel: 

She has fallen, she will not rise again - 

The virgin Israel. 

She lies neglected on her land; 

There is none to raise her up. (Amos 5:2) 

Jerusalem's apostasy has become so great that her judgment 
is permanent and irrevocable. She is Babylon, the implacable 
enemy of God, having become a dwelling place of demons and a 
prison of every unclean spirit, and a prison of every unclean and 
hateful bird, in contrast to the New Jerusalem in 21:27 ("nothing 
unclean . . . shall ever come into it"). The Harlot is in a wilder- 
ness (17:3), having been made desolate for her sins (17:16; cf. 
Matt. 24:15; our words wilderness, desert, desolation, and deso- 
late are basically the same word in Greek). The desert is, as we 
have already noted, the place of sin and demons (Matt. 12:43; 
cf. Luke 8:27). An important source for this is the original deso- 
lation of the world through the demon-inspired rebellion against 
God (Gen. 3:17-18). Following from this, on the Day of Atone- 
ment a goat was driven into the wilderness, bearing the sins of 
the people. This "scapegoat" was, literally, said to be sent to or 
for "Azazel" (Lev. 16:8, 10, 26),' a name for the "goat-demon" 



1. See the discussion of this point in Gordon J. Wenham, The Book of 
Leviticus (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1979), pp. 
231, 234f. , 243. 

446 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:2 

who lived in the wilderness. 2 Isaiah had prophesied about the 
desolation of Babylon: 

Desert creatures will lie down there, 

And their houses will be full of owls, 

Ostriches also will live there, 

And goat-demons will frolic there. (Isa. 13:21) 

God's wrath against Edom was phrased in much the same 

language: 

It shall not be quenched night or day; 

Its smoke shall go up forever; 

From generation to generation it shall be desolate; 

None shall pass through it forever and ever. 

But pelican and hedgehog shall possess it, 

And owl and raven shall dwell in it; 

And He shall stretch over it the measuring line of desolation 

And the plumb line of void. . . . 

And thorns shall come up on its fortified towers, 

Nettles and thistles in its fortified cities; 

It shall also be a haunt of jackals 

And an abode of ostriches. 

And the desert creatures shall meet with the wolves, 

The goat-demon also shall cry to its kind; 

Yes, the night demon [Lilith] shall settle there 

And shall find herself a resting place. (Isa. 34:10-14) 

Now the Angel's decree applies the ancient curses to the re- 
bellious Jews of the first century. Because Israel rejected Christ, 
the entire nation becomes demon-possessed, utterly beyond 
hope of reformation (cf. Matt. 12:38-45; Rev. 9:1-11). Under- 
scoring the tragedy of this is John's use of the term dwelling 
place (katoiketerion), a word elsewhere used for the place of 
God's special Presence, in heaven, in the holy city, in the Tem- 
ple, and in the Church; "the Place (katoiketerion) O Lord, 
which Thou hast made for Thy dwelling, the sanctuary, O 
Lord, which Thy hands have established" (Ex. 15:17; cf. 1 Kings 



2. This was not to be interpreted as a sacrifice to the demon himself (Lev. 
17:7). Centuries later, the apostate Northern Israelites under Jeroboam did in 
fact offer worship to this goat-demon (2 Chron, 11:15). 

447 



18:3-5 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

8:39,43, 49; 2 Chron. 30:27; Ps. 33:14; 76:2; 107:7; Eph. 2:22). 
Jerusalem, which had been God's dwelling place, has now be- 
come the unclean dwelling place of demons. 

3 Israel's abandonment and perversion of her calling as 
teacher-priest to the nations is again stated to be the reason for 
her destruction (cf. 14:8; 17:2, 4). She has committed fornica- 
tion with the nations, with the kings, and with the merchants, 
prostituting her gifts instead of leading the nations to the King- 
dom, joining with them in the attempted overthrow of the King. 
The stress on the merchants is most likely related to the com- 
mercial activities around the Temple (see below, on 18:ll-17a). 
The corruption of Temple commerce affected the liturgy of the 
nation. All of life flows from the religious center of culture; 3 if 
the core is rotten, the fruit is worthless. This is why Jesus came 
into conflict with the Temple moneychangers (Matt. 21:12-13; 
John 2:13-22). Observing that many of the shops belonged to 
the family of the high priest, Ford cites Josephus' characteriza- 
tion of the high priest Ananias as "the great procurer of money." 
In particular, "the court of the Gentiles appears to have been the 
scene of a flourishing trade in animal sacrifice, perhaps sup- 
ported by the high priestly family." 4 This would agree with the 
observation already made, that Babylon is no ordinary prosti- 
tute: Her punishment by fire indicates that she is of the priestly 
class (see on 17:16). 

4-5 Since Israel was to be destroyed, the apostles spent 
much of their time during the Last Days summoning God's peo- 
ple to a religious separation from her, urging them to align 
themselves instead with the Church (cf. Acts 2:37-40; 3:19-26; 
4:8-12; 5:27-32). This is St. John's message in Revelation. God's 
people must not seek to reform Israel, with its new religion of 
Judaism, but must abandon her to her fate. The Jews had "tasted 
the good Word of God and the powers of the Age to come" - the 



3. See Henry R. Van Til, The Calvinistic Concept of Culture (Philadelphia: 
The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1959); Abraham Kuyper, 
Lectures on Calvinism (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 
1931). 

4. J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and Com- 
mentary (Garden City: Doubleday and Co., 1975), pp. 301f, 

448 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:4-5 

Age brought in by Christ's redemptive act - and had fallen 
away. It would be "impossible to renew them again to repent- 
ance." Judaism - the vain attempt to continue the Old Cove- 
nant while rejecting Christ "is worthless and close to being cursed, 
and it ends up being burned" (Heb. 6:4-8). Old Covenant relig- 
ion cannot be revivified; it is impossible to have the Covenant 
without Christ. There can be no turning "back" to something 
which never existed, for even the fathers under the Old Cove- 
nant worshiped Christ under the signs and seals of the provi- 
sional age (1 Cor. 10:1-4). Now that "the Age to come" has arrived, 
salvation is with Christ and the Church. Only destruction awaits 
those who are identified with the Harlot: Come out of her, My 
people, that you may not participate in her sins and that you 
may not receive of her plagues (cf. Heb. 10:19-39; 12:15-29; 
13:10-14). Time for Israel's repentance has run out, and by now 
her sins have piled up [literally, have adhered\ to heaven (cf. 
Gen. 19:13; 2 Chron.28:9; Ezra 9:6; Jer. 51:9; Jon. 1:2). Jesus 
had foretold that this crucifying generation would "fill up the 
measure of the guilt" of their rebellious fathers, and thus that 
upon them would fall "all the righteous blood shed on earth" 
(Matt. 23:32-35). This prophecy was fulfilled within the first 
century, as St. Paul observed: "They are not pleasing to God, 
but hostile to all men, hindering us from speaking to the Gen- 
tiles that they might be saved; with the result that they always fill 
up the measure of their sins. But wrath has come upon them to 
the uttermost" (1 Thess. 2:15-16). 

Therefore, not only religious separation was demanded - 
that you may not participate in her sins - but physical, geo- 
graphical separation was necessary as well (cf. Matt. 24:16-21), 
that you may not receive of her plagues. The language is remin- 
iscent of God's call to His people to come out of Babylon at the 
end of the captivity. The Old Testament texts speak in terms of 
three ideas: the coming destruction of Babylon, the coming re- 
demption of the faithful Covenant people, and the rebuilding of 
the Temple (Ezra 1:2-3; Isa. 48:20; 52:11-12; Jer. 50:8; 51:6, 9, 
45). Similarly, the New Covenant people were to separate them- 
selves from Israel. The persecutors were about to suffer destruc- 
tion at God's hands, the Church's redemption was drawing near 
(Luke 21:28, 31), and the new Temple was about to be fully 
established. 

449 



18:6-8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

6-8 The righteous Judge demands full restitution: Pay her 
back even as she has paid, and give back double according to 
her deeds; in the cup which she has mixed, mix twice as much 
for her (cf. Jer. 50:15,29; Ps. 137:8; Isa. 40:2). This command, 
presumably, is spoken either to the angels of heaven, or to the 
Roman armies who are the agents of God's wrath. The expres- 
sion translated give back double actually has a Hebraic duplica- 
tion of the term, providing a "double witness," for purposes of 
emphasis: Double to her double things. This is the ordinary res- 
titution required by Biblical law (Ex. 22:4, 7). 5 Thus, to the 
degree that she glorified herself and lived sensuously, to the 
same degree give her torment and mourning. Double (or multi- 
ple) restitution in the Bible is not more than the criminal 
deserves. It is exactly what he deserves - a strict, proportional 
accounting of wrath according to God's lex talionis principle of 
equivalence: "life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for 
hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, bruise 
for bruise" (Ex. 21:23-25). 

This punishment comes on the Harlot because she says in 
her heart: I sit as a queen and am not a widow, and will never see 
mourning — paralleling the boast of the Laodicean church: "I 
have become rich, and have become wealthy, and have need of 
nothing" (3:17). The text is based on God's condemnation of 
Babylon in Isaiah 47:6-11, a pronouncement of judgment which 
would come upon her for mistreating the Covenant people: 

You did not show mercy to them, 

On the aged you made your yoke very heavy. 

Yet you said, "I shall be a queen forever." 

These things you did not consider, 

Nor remember the outcome of them. 

Now, then, hear this, you sensual one, 



5. Cf. God's declaration of judgment against Judah: "And I will first doubly 
repay their iniquity and their sin, because they have polluted My land" (Jer. 
16:18); "Bring on them a day of disaster, and crush them with twofold destruc- 
tion!" (Jer. 17:18). Contrast with this Isa. 40:2: "Speak to the heart of Jeru- 
salem, and call out to her that her warfare has ended, that her iniquity has 
been removed, that she has received of the LoaD's hand double for all her 
sins." On the pleonasm as a double witness, see James B. Jordan, 77ze Law of 
the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Chris- 
tian Economics, 1984), pp. 96, 106; on the laws of restitution, see pp. 134ff. 

450 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:6-8 

Who dwells securely, 

Who says in your heart, 

"I am, and there is no one besides me. 

I shall not sit as a widow, 

Nor shall I know the loss of children." 

But these two things shall come on you suddenly in one day: 

Loss of children and widowhood. 

They shall come on you in full measure 

In spite of your many sorceries, 

In spite of the great power of your spells. 

And you felt secure in your wickedness and said, 

"No one sees me." 

Your wisdom and your knowledge, they have deluded you; 

For you have said in your heart, 

"I am, and there is no one besides me." 

But evil will come on you 

Which you will not know how to charm away; 

And disaster will fall on you 

For which you cannot atone, 

And destruction about which you do not know 

Will come on you suddenly. 

Jerusalem has committed the sin of Eve, who committed 
fornication with the Dragon, in seeking to make herself God 
(Gen. 3:5); for when she says, "I am," she contradicts the decla- 
ration of the Most High God: "I, even I, am the Lord; and 
there is no Savior besides Me" (Isa. 43:11). For this reason in one 
Day her plagues will come, pestilence and mourning and fam- 
ine, and she will be burned up with fire; for strong is the Lord 
God who judges her. The Day of the Lord would come upon 
Israel in fiery judgment, bringing swift destruction (1 Thess. 
5:2-3). The term Day here does not signify some specific dura- 
tion of time; but it is used here to indicate relative suddenness, 
as well as emphasizing that the destruction of Jerusalem would 
be no random occurrence: it was coming as the Day of Judg- 
ment. As the priest's daughter who turned Harlot, she would be 
burned with fire (Lev. 21:9). After that awful Day came, "there 
was left nothing to make those who came there believe it had 
ever been inhabited." 6 



6. Josephus, The Jewish War, vii.i.l. 

451 



18:9-10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Reactions to Babylon 's Fall (18:9-20) 

9 And the kings of the earth, who committed fornication and 
lived sensuously with her, will weep and lament over her 
when they see the smoke of her burning, 

10 standing at a distance because of the fear of her torment, 
saying: Woe, woe, the great City, Babylon, the strong City! 
For in one hour your judgment has come. 

11 And the merchants of the earth weep and mourn over her, 
because no one buys their cargoes any more; 

12 cargoes of gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls; of fine 
linen, purple, silk, and scarlet; and every kind of citron 
wood, every article of ivory, and every article made from 
very costly wood, bronze, iron, and marble; 

13 and cinnamon, incense, perfume, and frankincense; and 
wine, olive oil, fine flour, and wheat; and sheep and cattle, 
of horses, of chariots, and of bodies; and souls of men. 

14 And the fruit of your soul's desire has gone from you, and 
all things that were luxurious and splendid have passed away 
from you and men will no longer find them. 

15 The merchants of these things, who became rich from her, 
will stand at a distance because of the fear of her torment, 
weeping and mourning, 

16 saying: Woe, woe, the Great City, she who was clothed in 
fine linen and purple and scarlet, and adorned with gold and 
precious stones and pearls; 

17 for in one hour such great wealth has been laid waste! And 
every shipmaster and everyone who sails anywhere, and 
every sailor, and as many as make their living by the sea, 
stood at a distance, 

18 and were crying out as they saw the smoke of her burning, 
saying: Who is like the Great City? 

19 And they threw dust on their heads and were crying out, 
weeping and mourning, saying: Woe, woe, the Great City, in 
which all who had ships at sea became rich by her costliness, 
for in one hour she has been laid waste! 

20 Rejoice over her, O heaven, and you saints and apostles and 
prophets, because God has judged your judgment against 
her! 

9-10 Three classes of people lament for the destruction of 
Jerusalem. The first group comprises the kings of the earth, the 
nations of the empire who aided and abetted the faithless Cove- 

452 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:9-10 

nant people in their apostasy from God. The destruction of the 
Harlot is a fearful sign to them of God's rigorous and inexorable 
judgment. They see the smoke of her burning - a symbol bor- 
rowed from the destruction of Sodom (Gen. 19:28) and the later, 
metaphorical description of the fall of Edom (Isa. 34: 10) - and 
are reminded that a similar judgment on themselves cannot be 
long in coming. God declared to the prophet Jeremiah that the 
nations of the earth would be forced to drink the cup of His 
fierce wrath: "And it will be, if they refuse to take the cup from 
your hand to drink, then you will say to them, Thus says the 
Lord of hosts: You shall surely drink! For behold, I am begin- 
ning to work calamity in this City which is called by My name, 
and shall you be completely free from punishment? You will not 
be free from punishment; for I am summoning a sword against 
all the inhabitants of the earth, declares the Lord of hosts" (Jer. 
25:28-29). 

The lament of each group ends with the words, Woe, woe, 
the Great City! This expression would turn out to have great sig- 
nificance for those living in Jerusalem in the years before and 
during the Tribulation. Josephus tells of a Jewish prophet (inter- 
estingly, his name was Jesus) in the Last Days, whose cry of 
"Woe, woe!" became a familiar aspect of life in the City. 

A portent still more alarming had appeared four years before 
the war at a time when profound peace and prosperity still pre- 
vailed in the city [i. e., a.d. 62]. One J esus, the son of Ananias, 
an uncouth peasant, came to the feast at which every J ew is ex- 
pected to put up a tabernacle for God [i.e., the Feast of Taber- 
nacles, or Sukkoth]; as he stood in the Temple courts he sud- 
denly began to cry out: "A voice from the east, a voice from the 
west, a voice from the Four Winds, a voice against J erusalem and 
the Sanctuary, a voice against the Bridegroom and the Bride, a 
voice against the whole people !" Day and night he uttered this 
cry as he went about all the alleys. 

Some of the leading citizens, seriously annoyed at these 
ominous pronouncements, laid hold of the man and beat him 
savagely. But he, without uttering a word in his own defense, or 
for the private information of those who were beating him, per- 
sisted in uttering the same warnings as before. Thereupon, the 
magistrates, rightly concluding that some supernatural impulse 
was responsible for his behavior, took him before the Roman 

453 



18:ll-17a PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

governor. There, although flayed to the bone with scourges, he 
neither begged for mercy nor shed a tear, but, raising his voice to 
a most mournful cry, answered every stroke with "Woe, woe, to 
J erusalem!" When Albinus, the governor, asked him who he was 
and whence he came and why he uttered these cries, he made no 
reply whatever, but endlessly repeated his dirge over the city, un- 
til Albinus released him because he judged him insane. 

Throughout this time, until the war broke out, he never ap- 
proached another citizen nor was he seen talking to any, but daily, 
like a prayer that he had memorized, he recited his lament: 
"Woe, woe, to J erusalem!" He never cursed any of those who 
beat him from day to day, nor did he thank those who gave him 
food; his only response to anyone was that melancholy prediction. 

His voice was heard most of all at the festivals. So, for seven 
years and five months he continued his wail, his voice as strong 
as ever and his vigor unabated, till, during the siege, after seeing 
the fulfillment of his foreboding, he was silenced. He was going 
his rounds, shouting in penetrating tones from the wall, "Woe, 
woe, once more to the city, and the people and the Temple!" 
Then, when he added a last word - "And woe to me also!"- a 
stone hurled from the ballista struck him, killing him on the 
spot. Thus, with those same forebodings still upon his lips, he 
met his end.' 

11 -17a The second and largest group of mourners is comprised 
of the merchants of the Land, weeping because no one buys 
their cargoes any more. The wealth of Jerusalem was a direct re- 
sult of the blessings promised in Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 
28. God had made her a great commercial center, but she had 
abused the gift. While there are similarities between the list of 
goods here and that in Ezekiel 27:12-24 (a prophecy against 
Tyre), it is likely that the items primarily reflect the Temple and 
the commerce surrounding it. Ford observes that "foreign trade 
had a great influence on the holy city, and the temple drew the 
largest share. The chief items were food supplies, precious met- 
als, luxury goods, and clothing materials." 8 Josephus described 
the luxurious wealth of the Temple's facade (cf. Luke 21:5): 
"The first gate was 70 cubits high and 25 broad; it had no doors, 
displaying unhampered the vast expanse of heaven; the entire 



7. Josephus, The Jewish War, vi.v.3. 

8. Ford, p. 305. 



454 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:ll-17a 

face was covered with gold, and through it the arch of the first 
hall was fully visible to an onlooker without in all its grandeur, 
and the surroundings of the inner gate, all gleaming with gold, 
struck the beholder's eye. . . . The gate opening into the build- 
ing was, as I said, completely overlaid with gold, as was the 
whole wall surrounding it. Above it, moreover, were the golden 
grapevines from which hung grape clusters as tall as a man. In 
front of these hung a veil of equal length of Babylonian tapestry 
embroidered with blue, scarlet and purple, and fine linen, 
wrought with marvelous craftsmanship. . . . The exterior of the 
sanctuary did not lack anything that could amaze either mind or 
eye. Overlaid on all sides with massive plates of gold, it reflected 
in the first rays of the sun so fierce a flash that those looking at it 
were forced to look away as from the very rays of the sun. To 
strangers as they approached it, it seemed in the distance like a 
mountain clad with snow; for any part not covered with gold 
was of the purest white." 9 

Josephus also records that one of the priests, named Jesus, 
turned over the treasures of the Temple to Titus: "He came out 
and handed from over the wall of the sanctuary two lampstands 
resembling those deposited in the sanctuary, as well as tables, 
bowls, and platters, all of solid gold and very heavy. He also 
handed over the curtains, the vestments of the high priests, set 
with precious stones, and a multitude of other objects required 
for the Temple services. In addition, the Temple treasurer, Phin- 
eas by name, when taken prisoner, disclosed the tunics and gir- 
dles of the priests, a large supply of purple and scarlet kept in 
store for repairing the curtain of the Temple, together with a 
large supply of cinnamon and cassia and a multitude of other 
spices, which were blended and burned daily as incense to God. 
He delivered many other treasures, with an abundance of sacred 
ornaments. . . ."10 

In the midst of a lengthy passage describing Jerusalem's ex- 
tensive commerce, Edersheim reports: "In these streets and 
lanes everything might be purchased: the production of Pales- 
tine, or imported from foreign lands - nay, the rarest articles 
from the remotest parts. Exquisitely shaped, curiously designed 



9. Josephus, The Jewish War, v.v.4,6. 

10. Ibid., vi.viii.3. 

455 



18:ll-17a PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

and j ewelled cups, rings, and other workmanship of precious 
metals; glass, silks, fine linen, woolen stuffs, purple, and costly 
hangings; essences, ointments, and perfumes, as precious as 
gold; articles of food and drink from foreign lands - in short, 
what India, Persia, Arabia, Media, Egypt, Italy, Greece, and 
even the far-off lands of the Gentiles yielded, might be had in 
these bazaars. Ancient Jewish writings enable us to identify no 
fewer than 118 different articles of import from foreign lands, 
covering more than even modern luxury has devised."ll 

St. John's list of trade goods divides into several sections, 
generally of four items each; the prosaic, businesslike enumera- 
tion concludes with a shock: 

1) cargoes of gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls; 

2) of fine linen, purple, silk, and scarlet; 12 

3) and every kind of citron wood, every article of ivory, and 
every article made from very costly wood, bronze, iron, and 
marble; 

4) and cinnamon, incense, perfume, and frankincense; 

5) and wine, olive oil, fine flour, and wheat; 

6) and sheep and cattle, even of horses, of chariots, and of 
bodies; 

7) and souls of men. 

The final phrase, adapted from the description of Tyre's 
slave traffic in Ezekiel 27:13, is applied to Jerusalem's spiritual 
bondage of men's souls. As St. Paul noted in his contrast of the 
earthly, apostate Jerusalem with the Church, the heavenly City 
of God: "The present Jerusalem ... is in slavery with her chil- 
dren," while "the Jerusalem above is free; She is our Mother" 
(Gal. 4:25-26). Jerusalem trafficked in many goods, from all 
over the world. In keeping with the promises of Leviticus 26 and 
Deuteronomy 28, God had made her into a great commercial 
center. But she abused God's gifts: Her most basic trade was in 
human souls. Instead of fulfilling her proper function as the 



11. Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, two vols, 
(McLean, VA: MacDonald Publishing Co., n.d.),Vol. 1, p. 116. 

12. As mentioned earlier (on 17:4), this may well be a reference to the Tem- 
ple curtain, a "Babylonian tapestry embroidered with blue, scarlet and purple, 
and fine linen, wrought with marvelous craftsmanship ." Josephus, The Jewish 
War, v.v.4. 

456 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:17b-19 

mother of all mankind, she prostituted herself, and led her chil- 
dren into demonic bondage, statist oppression, and finally an- 
nihilation. 

Briefly, the narrative turns to address Jerusalem herself: And 
the fruit of your soul's desire has gone from you, and all things 
that were luxurious and splendid have passed away from you 
and men will no longer find them. By heeding the Serpent and 
seeking to become as God, the Bride committed apostasy and 
thus lost access to the fruit she desired [cf. Matt. 21:19, 43]; 
barred from the Tree of Life, she lost also the other blessings of 
the Garden, "all things that were luxurious and splendid." 

The merchants of Israel had been enriched, Spiritually and 
(therefore) materially, from their relationship with Jerusalem; 
now, at the sight of her destruction, they are helpless to do any- 
thing but weep and mourn for the Great City, she who was 
clothed in fine linen and purple and scarlet, and adorned with 
gold and precious stones and pearls. Again, the description of 
the Harlot City indicates her identity as apostate Jerusalem, 
arrayed in the glory of the Temple and dressed in the fine linen 
of the righteous Bride (19:8). Those who have profited from 
Jerusalem's riches are shocked at the suddenness of her destruc- 
tion: for in one hour such great wealth has been laid waste! The 
expression translated laid waste is, as we should by now expect, 
desolated: It is the promised desolation of Jerusalem (Matt. 
23:38; 24:15, etc.) that is being described. The term hour is not 
to be taken in a strictly literal sense here, any more than in many 
other metaphorical uses of the word; rather, it is often used, 
especially in St. John, to refer to a particularly critical time (cf. 
Matt. 25:13; Mark 14:41; John 2:4; 5:25, 28; 7:30; 8:20; 12:23; 17:1; 
1 John 2:18). There is, however, the sense of swiftness. Jeru- 
salem's destruction was sudden, and even unexpected: right up 
to the end the people were looking for a miraculous deliverance. 
The world of apostate Judaism was stunned at the desolation of 
its City and Temple. The fall of Jerusalem was a shock to the 
system from which it has never recovered. 

17b-19 The third group that mourns for the fallen City is 
made up of every shipmaster and everyone who sails anywhere 
and every sailor, and as many as make their living by the sea. 
They too weep over the loss of Jerusalem, because all who had 

457 



18:20 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ships at sea became rich by her wealth. Obviously, investment in 
Israel's economy ceased to be profitable after a.d. 70, but it 
seems likely that the mourning of the "seafarers" points to the 
nations of the world (of which seafaring men would in any case 
be representatives). 

St. John has already spoken of the sea in relation to the 
Great City: the waters, over which the Harlot is straddled on the 
Beast, "are peoples and multitudes and nations and tongues" 
(17:15). He has also listed three classes of people affected by the 
Harlot's destruction: "the kings of the earth," "the merchants of 
the Land," and "all who had ships at sea." These seem to corre- 
spond to the threefold designation of those who had been cor- 
rupted by the Harlot, given in verse 3 : all the nations . . . the 
kings of the earth . . . the merchants of the Land. "Those who 
go down to the sea in ships, who do business on great waters" 
should have been instructed in the ways of the Lord, that they 
might call upon Him in their distress, that He might show them 
His Covenant mercy (Ps. 107:23-32). And, indeed, when Israel 
walked worthy of her calling, the whole world was enriched by 
her wealth: she had been "a guide to the blind, a light to those in 
darkness, a corrector of the foolish, a teacher of children, hav- 
ing in the Law the embodiment of knowledge and truth" (Rem. 
2:19-20). When Israel was in fellowship with God and under His 
Spiritual and material blessing, the nations had come to her both 
for wisdom and for trade and commerce (Deut. 28:12; 1 Kings 
10:23-25). In apostasy, however, trade became a snare, a means 
of committing fornication with idolaters, and Israel corrupted 
not only her own children, but the nations of the world as well. 
She had arrogated to herself the honors of deity, so that the sea- 
farers cried out: Who is like the Great City? (cf. the cry of the 
worshipers in 13:4: "Who is like the Beast?"). But because she 
had said in her heart, "I will ascend to heaven. ... I will make 
myself like the Most High," Jerusalem was cast down to hell 
(Isa. 14:13-15). In one hour she was laid waste, desolate, never 
again to be the Great City. 

20 There is a fourth response to Jerusalem's downfall: that 
of the Church. God's people are instructed by the angel to re- 
joice over her. The Church tabernacling in heaven - saints and 
apostles and prophets - had prayed for the destruction of the 

458 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:20 

apostate, demonized City that led the world in rebellion against 
God and persecution of His children. As the smoke of the whole 
burnt offering ascends to heaven, the saints are to rejoice that 
their prayers have been answered: God has judged your judgment 
against her! the angel announces, employing a Hebraic pleon- 
asm to express the divine Court's "double witness" against her. 
Again we find that the Biblical image of the Church, tabernacled 
in heaven, is firm in its opposition to evil, praying for God to 
vindicate His people in the earth. Note well: the judgment on 
the Harlot is called "your judgment," the Church's judgment. It 
was the just retribution to Israel for her oppression of saints, 
apostles, and prophets throughout her history, and culminating 
in the Last Days in her war against Christ and His Church. It 
was she who had inspired the Roman persecution of Christians; 
but the heathen wrath which she had stoked up had been poured 
out on her head instead. If the Church in our age is to proceed 
from victory to victory as did the Church in the apostolic age, 
she must recover the triumphalistic perspective of the early 
saints. The Church must pray for her enemies' defeat - a defeat 
that must come either by conversion or by destruction. We are 
at war, a war in which the definitive victory has been won by our 
King. All of history is now a mopping-up operation in terms of 
that victory, looking forward to the conversion of the world and 
the final overcoming of Death itself. Our opposition is doomed 
to perish, and the Church is called to rejoice in the certain 
knowledge of her earthly vindication and ultimate triumph. 

Babylon is Thrown Down (18:21-24) 

21 And a strong angel took up a stone like a great millstone and 
threw it into the sea, saying: Thus will Babylon, the great 
City, be thrown down with violence, and will not be found 
any longer. 

22 And the sound of harpists and musicians and flute-players 
and trumpeters will not be heard in you any longer; and no 
craftsman of any craft will be found in you any longer; and 
the sound of a mill will not be heard in you any longer; 

23 and the light of a lamp will not shine in you any longer; and 
the Voice of Bridegroom and Bride will not be heard in you 
any longer; for your merchants were the great men of the 
earth, because all nations were deceived by your sorcery. 

459 



18:21 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

24 And in her was found the blood of prophets and of saints 
and of all who have been slain on the earth. 

21 Jesus had instructed His disciples to pray for the moun- 
tain of Jerusalem to be cast into the sea (Matt. 21:21); He had 
warned the Pharisees that the man who opposed the Gospel and 
hindered the "little ones" from receiving it would be better off 
"if he had a millstone hung around his neck and he were thrown 
into the sea" (Luke 17:2; cf. Matt. 18:6; Mark 9:42). Here, in 
similar language, Jerusalem's destruction is symbolically por- 
trayed by the dramatic action of a strong angel, the third and 
final occurrence of this expression in Revelation. In the first 
(5:2), he is heard calling for someone to open the scroll declar- 
ing God's covenantal judgments on Jerusalem; in the second 
(10:lff.), he is seen as the Witness to the New Creation, holding 
the "little scroll" which spoke of the New Covenant and of the 
Church's role in the history of redemption, in the "finishing" of 
"the Mystery of God" in the Last Days. A related expression is 
used in 18:1-2, in which an angel with a "strong voice" an- 
nounces the final doom of Babylon. Now, in fulfillment of all of 
these, the strong angel casts a great millstone . . . into the sea. 
All productivity (the millstone) is gone (cf. v. 23); in contrast to 
the Church (1 Cor. 15:58), Jerusalem's labor has been in vain. 
She and her works are hurled into the Abyss. The Old Testa- 
ment background of this image comes from the destruction of 
the Egyptians in the Red Sea, according to Moses' song on the 
shore, echoed by the song of the Levites at the return from the 
Babylonian captivity: 

The Lord is a warrior; 

The Lord is His name. 

Pharaoh's chariots and his army He has cast into the sea; 

And the choicest of his officers are drowned in the Red Sea. 

The deeps cover them; 

They went down into the depths like a stone. . . . 

Thou didst blow with Thy wind, the sea covered them; 

They sank like lead in the mighty waters. (Ex. 15:3-5, 10) 

Thou didst see the affliction of our fathers in Egypt, 
And didst hear their cry by the Red Sea. . . . 
And Thou didst divide the sea before them, 

460 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:21 

So they passed through the midst of the sea on dry ground; 
And their pursuers Thou didst hurl into the depths, 
Like a stone into raging waters. (Neh. 9:9-11) 

The symbol is also based on the prophetic drama performed 
by Seraiah, Jeremiah's messenger of judgment (Jer. 51:61-64). 
After reading the prophecy of Babylon's "perpetual desolation," 
he tied the scroll to a stone and threw it into the Euphrates, declar- 
ing: "Just so shall Babylon sink down and not rise again. . .." 
Applying Seraiah's words to the Harlot, the angel says: Thus 
will Babylon, the great city, be thrown down with violence, and 
will not be found any longer. How was this fulfilled in a.d. 70, if 
"Jerusalem" is still standing in the twentieth century? In a physi- 
cal sense, of course, Jerusalem was not destroyed forever in a.d. 
70, any more than Babylon or Edom or Egypt was destroyed 
"forever." But prophecy is covenantally and ethically oriented; it 
is not primarily concerned with geography as such. For exam- 
ple, consider Isaiah's prophecy against Edom: 

Its streams shall be turned into pitch, 

And its loose earth into brimstone, 

And its land shall become burning pitch. 

It shall not be quenched night or day; 

Its smoke shall go up forever; 

From generation to generation it shall be desolate; 

None shall pass through it forever and ever. (Isa. 34:9-10) 

This is evocative language, associating the desolation of 
Edom with the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. In a 
"literal," physical sense, the prophecy was not fulfilled; but it 
has been fulfilled, in terms of its actual meaning and intent. The 
ancient territory of Edom still contains trees and flowers, por- 
tions of it are used as cropland, and travelers continue to pass 
through it. As Patrick Fairbairn observed, "Edom was to be 
stricken with poverty and ruin: Edom, however, not simply, nor 
chiefly as a land, but as a people. This was what the prophecy 
foretold, and it has been amply verified. . . . The Edom of 
prophecy - Edom considered as the enemy of God, and the rival 
of Israel - has perished forever; all, in that respect, is an untrod- 
den wilderness, a hopeless ruin; and there, the veracity of God's 

461 



18:21 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

word finds its justification." 13 

Fairbairn explained how Edom is used in prophetic symbol- 
ism: "In the latter stages of the history of Israel, the Edomites 
surpassed all their enemies in keenness and intensity of malice; 
and hence they naturally came to be viewed by the Spirit of 
prophecy as the personification of that godless malignity and 
pride which would be satisfied with nothing less than the utter 
extermination of the cause of God — the heads and representa- 
tives of the whole army of the aliens, whose doom was to carry 
along with it the downfall and destruction of everything that op- 
posed and exalted itself against the knowledge of God. This is 
manifestly the aspect presented of the matter in verse 15 of the 
prophecy of Obadiah; the fate of all the heathen is bound up 
with that of Edom: 

For the Day of the Lord draws near on all the nations; 
As you [Edom] have done, it will be done to you; 
Your dealings will return on your head; 

- that is, in Edom, the quintessence of heathenism, all heathen- 
ism was to receive, as it were, its death -blow." 14 

Moreover, the prophet Amos foretold the subjugation of 
"Edom" under the rule of the House of David (Amos 9:11-12), 
and the New Testament interpretation of this text explains it as a 
prophecy of the conversion of the nations under the government 
of Christ (Acts 15:14-19). 'This clearly implies that the Edom of 
prophecy, which was doomed to utter prostration and eternal 
ruin, is only the Edom of bitter and unrelenting hostility to the 
cause and people of God; that insofar as the children of Edom 
ceased from this, and entered into a friendly relation to the cov- 
enant of God, and submitted to the yoke of universal sover- 
eignty committed to the house of David, instead of breaking it, 
as of old, from their necks, they should participate in the bless- 
ing, and have their interests merged in those of the people on 
whom God puts His name to do them good. A promise and 
prospect like this can never be made to harmonize with the 
result that is obtained from the predicted judgments upon 



13. Patrick Fairbairn, The Interpretation of Prophecy (London: The Ban- 
ner of Truth Trust, [1865] 1964), p. 221. 

14. Ibid., pp. 221f. 

462 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:22-23 

Edom, as read by the strictly literal style of interpretation; for, 
according to it, there should be no remnant to be possessed, no 
seed or place of blessing, as connected with Edom, but one ap- 
palling scene of sterility, desolation, and cursing." 15 

Similarly, the "forever" desolation of J erusalem means that 
Israel, as the covenant people, will cease to exist. Jerusalem - as 
the Great City, the Holy City - will not be found any longer. 16 
True, as Remans 1 1 clearly shows, the descendants of Abraham 
will be grafted into the covenant again. 7 But they will not be a 
distinct, holy nation of special priests. They will join the peoples 
of the world in the saved multitude, with no distinction (Isa. 
19:19-25). By His finished work Christ "made both groups 
[Hebrew and Gentile believers] into one" (Eph.2:14). They have 
been united "in one Body," the Church (Eph. 2:16). There is one 
salvation and one Church, in which all believers, regardless of 
ethnic heritage, become children of God and heirs of the prom- 
ises to Abraham (Gal. 3:26-29; cf. Eph. 2:11-22). Old Jerusalem, 
the apostate harlot, has been replaced by New Jerusalem, the 
pure Bride of Christ. There is no salvation outside of the 
Church. 

22-23 As a further indication of the removal of the Harlot's 
COvenantal status, the angel announces that the blessings of the 
Garden of Eden will be forever taken away. Alluding both to 
J eremiah's prophecies against the rebellious J erusalem of his 
day (Jer. 7:34; 16:9; 25:10; cf. Isa. 24:7-12), and to Ezekiel's 
prophecy against the king of Tyre (Ezek. 28:11-19), he pro- 
nounces the City's doom in five parts: 

First, there is a fourfold description of the loss of music 
throughout the entire Land: And the sound of harpists and mu- 
sicians and flute-players and trumpeters will not be heard in you 
any longer (cf. the mention of "tambourines" and "flutes" in 
Ezek. 28:13 [margin]). 



15. Ibid., pp. 224f. 

16. This expression is used six times in verses 21-23, connoting the fact that 
Jerusalem has fallen short - that, like Babylon of old, it has been weighed in 
the scales and found deficient, and is about to be overthrown, with its king- 
dom given to others (Dan. 5:25-28). 

17. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 125-31. 

463 



18:22-23 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Second, the productivity of the Land disappears, as the 
workman is taken from Israel and cast into the Abyss: No crafts- 
man of any craft will be found in you any longer. According to 
Zechariah, the tyranny of heathen nations over Israel would be 
restrained by her craftsmen (Zech. 1: 18-21). But, for apostate 
Israel, this bulwark against oppression will no longer exist. 

The third and middle item in the list is significant: The sound 
of a mill will not be heard in you any longer. The image of the 
Mill was, throughout the ancient world, a symbol of the foun- 
dation of the cosmos, grinding out peace and prosperity; the 
Mill's destruction signifies the End of the Age. '8 The centrality 
of the mill in this passage may indicate that the Temple, as the 
Mill that supports the world, is to be destroyed; Christ has 
brought in the Final Age. 

Fourth, Israel will suffer the loss of God's Word, of discern- 
ment and wisdom, and of eschatological hope: The light of a 
lamp will not shine in you any longer. 

Fifth, the summing-up of Jerusalem's desolation is that, as 
the unfaithful wife, the Harlot, she has been cast out and re- 
placed by another: The Voice of Bridegroom and Bride will not 
be heard in you any longer. 

These five points mark several important characteristics of 
the J erusalem Temple: 

1. Music - theLevitical orchestra and choir (1 Chron. 25) 

2. Craftsmen -cf. Bezalel,Oholiab, Hiram, etc. (Ex. 31:1-11; 

1 Kings 5) 

3. Mill- the Temple itself (the "threshingfloor"; 2 Chron. 3:1) 

4. Lamp - the Lampstand(s) (Ex. 25:31-40; 2 Chron. 4:19-22) 

5. Marriage-the marriage of the Lord and Israel (Ezek. 16:1-14) 

The desolation of Jerusalem is said to fall on her for two 
reasons. First, her merchants were the great men of the Land. 
This should not seem strange at first glance; much the same 
could be said of any city in history. In any prosperous economy, 



18. See Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend, Hamlet's Mill: An 
Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time (Ipswich: Gambit, 1969). On the sym- 
bolism of Samson's grinding at the mill (Jud. 16:21), see James B. Jordan, 
Judges: God's War Against Humanism (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1985), 
p. 273. 

464 



BABYLON IS FALLEN! 18:24 

merchants will be prominent. But what, in the final analysis, 
were Israel's "merchants" trading in? The souls of men (v. 13). As 
Jesus had thundered to the "great men of the Land": "Woe to 
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you travel about 
on sea and land to make one convert; and when he becomes 
one, you make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves!" 
(Matt. 23:15). 

The second reason for Jerusalem's punishment flows from 
the first: all the nations were deceived by your sorcery. Israel had 
been the priest to the nations of the world, ordained both to 
bring them the light of salvation and to offer up sacrifices on 
their behalf. This should have culminated in the presentation of 
Christ to the nations as the Light of the world and the true sacri- 
fice for their sins. Instead, Israel rejected Christ, the sum and 
substance of Biblical religion. By attempting to retain the for- 
mal structure of the Old Covenant in its rejection of the New, 
Israel essentially created a hybrid religion of occult Satan- 
worship and statism.' 9 And she was torn in pieces by her own 
gods. 

24 St. John provides a final clue to the Harlot's identity in 
this verse, confirming our interpretation that she represents 
Jerusalem: In her was found the blood of prophets and of saints 
and of all who have been slain on the earth. This is a clear allu- 
sion to Christ's condemnation of Jerusalem, at the close of His 
final discourse in the Temple: 

Therefore, behold, I am sending you prophets and wise men 
and scribes; some of them you will kill and crucify, and some of 
them you will scourge in your synagogues, and persecute from 
city to city, that upon you may fall all the righteous bloodshed 
on the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of 
Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, whom you murdered between 
the sanctuary and the altar. Truly I say to you, all these things 
shall come upon this generation. Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who 
kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! (Matt. 
23:34-37) 



19. On the intimate historical relationship between occultism and statism, 
see Gary North, Unholy Spirits: Occultism and New Age Humanism (Ft. 
Worth, TX; Dominion Press, 1986). 

465 



18:24 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

This language cannot be used of Rome or any other city. 
Only J erusalem was guilty of "all the righteous blood shed on 
the earth," from Abel onward. Historically, it was Jerusalem 
that had always been the great Harlot, continually falling into 
apostasy and persecuting the prophets (Acts 7:51-52); J erusalem 
was the place where the prophets were killed: as Jesus Himself 
said, "It cannot be that a prophet should perish outside of J eru- 
salem. O J erusalem, J erusalem, the city that kills the prophets 
and stones those sent to her!" (Luke 13 :33-34). St. John's "Cove- 
nant Lawsuit" was true, and effective. Jerusalem was found 

guilty as charged, and from A.D. 66-70 she suffered the "days of 
vengeance," the outpouring of God's wrath for her agelong 
shedding of innocent blood. 



466 



19 
THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 

The Marriage Supper of the Lamb (19:1-10) 

1 After these things I heard, as it were, a loud voice of a great 
multitude in heaven, saying: Hallelujah! Salvation and 
power and glory belong to our God; 

2 because His judgments are true and righteous; for He has 
judged the great Harlot who was corrupting the earth with 
her fornication, and He has avenged the blood of His serv- 
ants at her hand! 

3 And a second time they said: Hallelujah! Her smoke rises up 
forever and ever! 

4 And the twenty-four elders and the four living creatures fell 
down and worshiped God who sits on the Throne saying: 
Amen! Hallelujah! 

5 And a Voice came from the Throne, saying: Praise our God, 
all you His servants and those who serve Him, both the 
small and the great. 

6 And I heard, as it were, the voice of a great multitude and as 
the sound of many waters and as the sound of mighty peals 
of thunder, saying: Hallelujah! For the Lord our God, the 
Almighty, reigns. 

7 Let us rejoice and be glad and give the glory to Him, for the 
marriage of the Lamb has come, and His Bride has made 
herself ready. 

8 And it was given to her to clothe herself in fine linen, bright 
and clean; for the fine linen is the righteous acts of the 
saints. 

9 And he said to me, Write: Blessed are those who are invited 
to the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he said to me, 
These are the true words of God. 

10 And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said to me, 
Dont do that! I am a fellow servant of yours and of your 

467 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

brethren who hold the Testimony of Jesus; worship God! 
For the Testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy. 

There are several similarities in language between this pass- 
age and that in 11:15-19, the announcement of the seventh 
angel's theme of the completion of "the Mystery of God": the 
opening of the Kingdom and the heavenly Temple to the whole 
world in the New Covenant. We can easily see the message of 
these verses as an expansion of that idea when we take note of 

the parallels: 



11:15 - loud voices in heaven. 



19:1 - a loud voice of a great 
multitude in heaven. 



11:15, 17 - He will reign forever 
and ever. . . . Thou hast taken 
Thy great power and didst 
reign. 



11:16 - The twenty-four elders 
. . . fell on their faces and wor- 
shiped God. 

11:18 - The time came for the 
dead to be vindicated, and the 
time to give their reward to Thy 
servants the prophets and to the 
saints. 



19:1, 6 - Hallelujah! Salvation 
and power and glory belong to 
our God. . . Hallelujah! For 
the Lord our God, the Al- 
mighty, reigns. 

19:4 - The twenty-four elders 
... fell down and worshiped 
God. 

18:24-19:2 -In her was found 
the blood of prophets and of 
saints. ... His judgments are 
true and righteous; for ... He 
has avenged the blood of His 
servants. 



11:18- Thy servants . . . those 
who fear Thy name, the small 
and the great. 

11:19 - There were lightings, 
noises, thunderings. . . . 



19:5 -All you His servants, you 
who fear Him, the small and the 
great. 

19:6 -The voice of a great mul- 
titude and as the sound of many 
waters and as the sound of 
mighty peals of thunder. . . . 



The appearance of the Bride, prepared for marriage, is thus 
equivalent to the opening of the Temple and the full establish- 



468 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:1-2 

ment of the New Covenant. These same images are brought to- 
gether again at the close of this series of visions, when the City 
of God descends from heaven, "made ready as a Bride adorned 
for her Husband; and I heard a loud voice from the Throne, 
saying: Behold, the Tabernacle of God is among men, and He 
shall dwell among them. . . ." (21:2-3). The Church, the Bride 
of Christ and City of God, is the New Covenant Temple - or, 
rather, "the Lord God, the Almighty, and the Lamb, are its 
Temple" (21:22). 

1-2 God's people had prayed for J erusalem's destruction 
(6:9-11). Now that their prayers have been answered, the great 
multitude of the redeemed breaks out into antiphonal praise, in 
obedience to the angelic command in 18:20: "Rejoice over her, O 
Heaven, and you saints and apostles and prophets, because God 
has judged your judgment against her!" We should note care- 
fully what St. J ohn is doing here. The Revelation is a prophecy, 
and therefore intended "for edification and exhortation and 
consolation" (1 Cor. 14:3): Its readers were commanded to "heed 
the things that are written in it" (Rev. 1:3). In revealing the heav- 
enly Church's imprecatory prayers against her enemies, St. J ohn 
was instructing his brethren on earth to do the same; now, hav- 
ing revealed the certain destruction of the Harlot, he shows the 
Church of the first century what their duty must be when J eru- 
salem falls. They are not to mourn her passing, but to praise 
God for the execution of His vengeance upon her. God's will is 
to be performed on earth as it is performed in heaven. In show- 
ing the pattern of heavenly worship, St. J ohn reveals God's will 
for earthly worship as well. 

The antiphonal liturgy is divided into five distinct parts. The 
number five is, as we have seen (cf. 9:5), connected with 
strength, especially in terms of military action. Appropriately, 
this five-part song is a "battle-hymn," based on Old Testament 
songs of triumph over the enemies of God and the Covenant. 
The heavenly multitude sings: Hallelujah! The only New Testa- 
ment uses of this Hebrew expression (meaning Praiseyethe 
Lord!) are in this passage, where it occurs four times, in praise 
for the divine reconquest of the earth. As Hengstenberg notes, 
"the preservation of the Hebrew word, as in the case also of 
Amen and Hosanna, serves like a visible finger-post to mark the 

469 



19:1-2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

internal connection between the Church of the New Testament 
and that of the Old ."' The word itself recalls the Old Testament 
Hallel-psalms (Ps. 113-118), songs of victory that were sung at 
the festivals of Passover and Tabernacles. These psalms cele- 
brated the greatness of God, especially as revealed in the deliver- 
ance of His people from Egypt and their restoration to true wor- 
ship; and they look forward to the day when all nations will 
praise the Lord. Except for minor allusions to a couple of 
Hallel-psalms in verses 5 and 7, St. J ohn does not construct this 
liturgy on their pattern; rather, the use of Hallelujah alone is 
enough to make the connection. The first Biblical occurence of 
the expression, however, is in Psalm 104:35, which strikingly 
parallels the juxtaposition of judgment and praise in Revela- 
tion: 

Let sinners be consumed from the earth, 
And let the wicked be no more. 
Bless the Lord, O my soul. 
Hallelujah! 

The destruction of apostate J erusalem on behalf of Christ 
and His Church will be the demonstration that salvation and 
power and glory belong to our God - a phrase that recalls 
David's exultation when the preparations for building the Tem- 
ple had been completed: "Thine, O Lord, is the greatness and 
the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty, indeed 
everything that is in the heavens and the earth; Thine is the do- 
minion, O Lord, and Thou dost exalt thyself as head over all" 
(1 Chron. 29:11; Christ also alluded to David's text in the Lord's 
Prayer, Matt. 6:13:"Thine is the Kingdom and the power and 
the glory forever and ever, Amen"). The song also quotes 
David's celebration of the Law's all-embracing authority in 
Psalm 19:9: 'The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous 
altogether." In the fulfillment of the Law's curses on the apos- 
tate city, God's new Israel takes up the chant, affirming that His 
judgments are true and righteous. 

Israel's destruction is the showcase of God's righteousness. 
God's honor could not endure the blasphemy of His name occa- 



1. E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John, two vols, (Cherry Hill, 
NJ: Mack Publishing Co., n.d.), vol. 2, p. 238. 

470 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:1-2 

sioned by the rebellion of His people (Rem. 2:24). The proof 
that "His judgments are true and righteous" is precisely the fact 
that He has avenged Himself upon His own people, rejecting 
those who had been called by His name: for He has judged the 
Great Harlot who was corrupting the earth with her fornication, 
and He has avenged the blood of His servants at her hand! This 
establishes the connection between the Harlot and the "Jezebel" 
who was seeking to destroy the churches (see 2:20-24). J ezebel, 
the harlot queen (2 Kings 9:22), had drawn Israel from the wor- 
ship of the true God into a cult of statism and idolatry (1 Kings 
16:29-34). She had persecuted and murdered the prophets 
(1 Kings 18:4, 13), and raised up false witnesses to slander the 
righteous in court (1 Kings 21:1-16). Thus J ehu was ordained by 
God's messenger to destroy the house of Ahab, "that I may 
avenge the blood of My servants the prophets, and the blood of 
all the servants of the Lord, at the hand of Jezebel" (2 Kings 
9:7). Israel's adulterous flirtations and dalliances with paganism 
are likened by the prophets to Jezebel's "harlotries and witch- 
craft" (2 Kings 9:22): just as she "painted her eyes and adorned 
her head" in a futile attempt to ward off her destruction (2 Kings 
9:30-37), Israel vainly did the same: 

And you, O desolate one, what will you do? 

Although you dress in scarlet, 

Although you decorate yourself with ornaments of gold, 

Although you enlarge your eyes with paint, 

In vain you make yourself beautiful; 

Your lovers despise you; 

They seek your life. (Jer.4:30; cf. Ezek. 23:40) 

Nothing short of repentance could have saved Jerusalem. 
This she adamantly refused to do, and so God took vengeance 
on her for her persecution of the righteous. Again it must be 
emphasized that J esus specifically marked out J erusalem as the 
object of God's vengeful wrath. Speaking of the outpouring of 
covenantal curses which would culminate in the a.d.70 destruc- 
tion of Jerusalem, He said: "These are the days of vengeance, in 
order that all things that are written may be fulfilled" (Luke 
21:22). Through Moses God had warned of Israel's future apos- 
tasy, when they would make Him jealous by serving other gods 
(Deut. 32: 15-22), bringing certain destruction upon themselves 

471 



19:3-5 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

and their land (Deut. 32:23-43). Four times in this passage God 
threatens that His vengeance will overtake the apostates: " Ven- 
geance is mine, and retribution" (v. 35); "I will render vengeance 
on My adversaries, and I will repay those who hate Me" (v. 41); 
"Rejoice, O nations, with His people; for He will avenge the 
blood of His servants, and will render vengeance on His adver- 
saries, and will atone for His land and His people" (v. 43). 

3 In the second division of the song, the great multitude re- 
peats the refrain: Hallelujah! The reason for praise is, again, a 
godly rejoicing at the destruction of the Church's enemy, for her 
smoke rises up forever and ever. As we have noted (see on 14:11; 
18:2, 9), this expression is based on the destruction of Sodom 
and Gomorrah (Gen. 19:28), while the specific phraseology is 
borrowed from Isaiah's description of the punishment of Edom 
(Isa. 34:10). It is used hereto indicate the permanent nature of 
Babylon's fall. 2 

4 The third section of the liturgy finds the twenty-four 
elders and the four living creatures - representing the Church 
and all the earthly creation (see on 4:4-11) - taking up their dis- 
tinctive part in the song. First, we are told, they fell down and 
worshiped; again we notice the importance of posture, of physi- 
cal attitude, in our religious activity. The modern Church's 
affliction of "spiritualistic" neoplatonism — not to mention sim- 
ple laziness - has resulted in her all-too-casual approach to the 
Most High. At the very least, our physical position in public, 
official worship should be one that corresponds to the godly fear 
and reverence which is appropriate in those who are admitted to 
an audience with God who sits on the throne. 

5 We are not told whose Voice pronounces the fourth sec- 
tion of the liturgy from the Throne. It could be that of one of 
the elders, leading the congregation from a position close to the 
throne; but it is more likely to be that of Jesus Christ (cf. 16:17), 
calling upon His brethren (Rem. 8:29; Heb. 2:11-12) to praise 



2. The phrase thus cannot be pressed into service as a literal description of 
the eternal state of the wick ed in general. The actual flames that consumed 
"Babylon" burned out long ago; but her punishment was eternal. She will 
never be resurrected. 

472 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:6-8 

our God (cf. John 20:17, where Jesus says, "I ascend to My 
Father and your Father, and My God and your God"). That this 
is addressed to the Church as a whole is clear from the descrip- 
tion of the worshipers: His servants, those who fear Him, the 
small and the great. 

6-8 As the entire Church responds to the officiant's invita- 
tion, she speaks with the familiar Voice of the Glory-Cloud (cf. 
Ex. 19:16; Ezek. 1:24), indicating her full identification with the 
glorious Image of God: St. J ohn hears, as it were, the voice of a 
great multitude and as the sound of many waters and as the 
sound of mighty peals of thunder. The Cloud has assumed the 
Church into itself. 

The first Hallelujah! of the "great multitude" had praised 
God for His sovereignty, as shown in the judgment of the great 
Harlot. The fourth Hallelujah!, in this fifth and final portion of 
the liturgy, praises God again for His sovereignty, this time as 
shown in the marriage of the Lamb to His Bride. The destruc- 
tion of the Harlot and the marriage of the Lamb and the Bride 
- the divorce and the wedding - are correlative events. The ex- 
istence of the Church as the congregation of the New Covenant 
marks an entirely new epoch in the history of redemption. God 
was not now merely taking Gentile believers into the Old Cove- 
nant (as He had often done under the Old Testament economy). 
Rather, He was bringing in "the age to come" (Heb.2:5;6:5), 
the age of fulfillment, during these Last Days. Pentecost was the 
inception of a New Covenant. With the final divorce and de- 
struction of the unfaithful wife in A.D. 70, the marriage of the 
Church to her Lord was firmly established; the Eucharistic cele- 
bration of the Church was fully revealed initS true nature as 
"the Marriage Supper of the Lamb" (v. 9). 

The multitude of the redeemed exults: His Bride has made 

herself ready! The duty of the apostles during the Last Days was 
to prepare the Church for her nuptials. Paul wrote of Christ's 
sacrifice as the redemption of the Bride: He "loved the Church 
and gave Himself up for her; that He might sanctify her, having 
cleansed her by the washing of water with the Word; that He 
might present to Himself the glorious Church, having no spot or 
wrinkle or any such thing; but that she should be holy and 
blameless" (Eph. 5:25-27). Paul extended this imagery in speak- 

473 



19:6-8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ing to the Corinthians about the goal of his ministry: "I am jeal- 
ous for you with a godly jealousy; for I betrothed you to one 
Husband, that to Christ I might present you as a pure virgin." 
Yet there was the danger that the Church would be seduced into 
fornication with the Dragon; the Apostle was "afraid, lest as the 
Serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, your minds should be led 
astray from the simplicity and purity of devotion to Christ" 
(2 Cor. 11:2-3). As the crisis of those days was drawing to its 
conclusion, when many were departing the faith and following 
after various heresies, Jude penned a hurried emergency 
message to the Church (see Jude 3), in which he enjoined the 
Bride to remain faithful to her Lord, committing her "to Him 
who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand 
in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy" (Jude 24). 
But now St. John sees a vision of the Church in her glory 
and purity, having successfully met her trials and temptations, 
having passed through great tribulations into her possession of 
the Kingdom as the Bride of Christ. Contrary to the expecta- 
tions of Rome, the destruction of Jerusalem was not the end for 
the Church. Instead, it was the Church's full establishment as 
the new Temple, the final declaration that God had taken to 
Himself a new Bride, a faithful, chaste virgin who had success- 
fully resisted the seductive temptations of the Dragon. She had 
made herself ready, and this was her wedding day. The early 
Christians learned well the lesson that was later stated by the 
third-century bishop St. Cyprian: "The spouse of Christ cannot 
be adulterous; she is uncorrupted and pure. She knows one 
home; she guards with chaste modesty the sanctity of one couch. 
She keeps us for God. She appoints the sons whom she has born 
for the kingdom. Whoever is separated from the Church and is 
joined to an adulteress, is separated from the promises of the 
Church; nor can he who forsakes the Church of Christ attain to 
the rewards of Christ. He is a stranger; he is profane; he is an 
enemy. He can no longer have God for his Father, who has not 
the Church for his mother. If anyone could escape who was out- 
side the ark of Noah, then he also may escape who shall be out- 
side of the Church. The Lord warns, saying, 'He who is not with 
me is against me, and he who gathereth not with me scattereth' 
[Matt. 12:30]. He who breaks the peace and the concord of 
Christ, does so in opposition to Christ; he who gathereth else- 

474 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:9 

where than in the Church, scatters the Church of Christ. ... He 
who does not hold this unity does not hold God's law, does not 
hold the faith of the Father and the Son, does not hold life and 
salvation." 3 

The song of praise continues: And it was given to her to 
clothe herself in fine linen, bright and clean; for the fine linen is 
the righteous acts of the saints. We have already seen linen used 
as a symbol (15:6; cf. 3:4; 4:4;7:9, 14); now, its symbolic mean- 
ing is explicitly stated to be the saints' righteous acts. 4 Two im- 
portant points are made here about the saints' obedience: first, it 
was given to her — our sanctifi cation is due wholly to the gra- 
cious work of God's Holy Spirit in our hearts; second, she was 
graciously enabled to clothe herself in the linen of righteous 
acts - our sanctification is performed by ourselves. This dual 
emphasis is found throughout the Scriptures: "You shall sanc- 
tify yourselves. ... I am the Lord who sanctifies you" (Lev. 
20:7-8); "Work out your salvation with fear and trembling; for it 
is God who is at work in you, both to will and to work for His 
good pleasure" (Phil. 2:12-13). 

9 St. John is instructed to write the fourth and central beati- 
tude of the Book of Revelation: Blessed are those who are in- 
vited to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. God's people have 
been saved from the whoredoms of the world to become the 
Bride of His only begotten Son; and the constant token of this 
fact is the Church's weekly celebration of her sacred feast, the 
Holy Eucharist. The absolute fidelity of this promise is under- 
scored by the angel's assurance to St. John that these are the 
true words of God. 

it should go without saying (but, unfortunately, it cannot), 



3. Cyprian, On the Unity of the Church, 6; in Alexander Roberts and 
James Donaldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans, reprinted 1971), Vol. 5, p. 423. 

4. The Greek word is generally used in the New Testament to mean God's 
"statute" or "ordinance" (Luke 1:6; Rem. l:32;8:4;Heb. 9:1, 10; Rev. 15:4); 
the related meaning, used here, is "fulfillment of God's statute" (cf. Rem. 
5:18). A further meaning is the "judicial sentence that one has met God's re- 
quirement" and hence "justification" (cf. Rem. 5:16). While some have argued 
for "justification" as the proper meaning here, both the context and the fact 
that the plural form of the word is employed indicate its most natural meaning 
to be "righteous acts." 

475 



19:9 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

that the Eucharist is the center of Christian worship; the Euch- 
arist is what we are commanded to do when we come together 
on the Lord's Day. Everything else is secondary. This is not to 
suggest that the secondary things are unimportant. The teaching 
of the Word, for example, is very important, and in fact neces- 
sary for the growth and well-being of the Church. Doctrine has 
long been recognized as one of the essential marks of the 
Church. Instruction in the faith is therefore an indispensable 
part of Christian worship. But it is not the heart of Christian 
worship. The heart of Christian worship is the Sacrament of the 
Body and Blood of our Lord J esus Christ. This is assumed by 
St. Paul in 1 Corinthians 10:16-17 and 11:20-34. We can see it re- 
flected in Luke's simple statement in Acts 20:7: "And on the first 
day of the week, when we were gathered together to break 
bread. . .." It is also described in the Didache: "But every 
Lord's Day do ye gather yourselves together, and break bread, 
and give thanksgiving after having confessed your transgres- 
sions, that your sacrifice may be pure ."5 J ustin Martyr reports 
the same pattern as the standard for all Christian assemblies: 
"On the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country 
gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or 
the writings of the prophets are read, as long as time permits; 
then, when the reader has ceased, the president verbally in- 
structs, and exhorts to the imitation of these good things. Then 
we all rise and pray, and, as we before said, when our prayer is 
ended, bread and wine and water are brought, and the president 
in like manner offers prayers and thanksgivings, according to his 
ability, and the people assent, saying, Amen; and there is a dis- 
tribution to each, and a participation of that over which thanks 
have been given, and to those who are absent a portion is sent 
by the deacons." 6 

The greatest privilege of the Church is her weekly participa- 
tion in the Eucharistic meal, the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. 
It is a tragedy that so many churches in our day neglect the 



5. The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, xiv. 1, in Alexander Roberts and 
James Donaldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. 
Eerdmans, reprinted 1971), Vol. 7, p. 381. 

6. Justin Martyr, The First Apology, chap, lxvii, in Alexander Roberts and 
James Donaldson, eds., The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. 
Eerdmans, reprinted 1971), Vol. 1, p. 186. 

476 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:9 

Lord's Supper, observing it only on rare occasions (some so- 
called churches have even abandoned Communion altogether). 
What we must realize is that the official worship service of the 
Church on the Lord's Day is not merely a Bible study or some 
informal get-together of like-minded souls; to the contrary, it is 
the formal wedding feast of the Bride with her Bridegroom. 
That is why we meet together on the first day of the week. In 
fact, one of the primary issues in the controversy of the Protes- 
tant Reformation was the fact that the Roman Church admitted 
its members to the Eucharist only once a year. 7 Ironically, the 
practice of the Roman Church now excels that of most "Protes- 
tant" churches; on the issue of frequent communion at least, it 
is Rome which has "reformed ." 

Commenting on the dictum of the German materialistic phi- 
losopher Ludwig Feuerbach that "man is what he eats," the 
great Orthodox theologian Alexander Schmemann wrote: 
"With this statement . . . Feuerbach thought he had put an end 
to all 'idealistic' speculations about human nature. In fact, how- 
ever, he was expressing, without knowing it, the most religious 
idea of man. For long before Feuerbach the same definition of 
man was given by the Bible. In the biblical story of creation man 
is presented, first of all, as a hungry being, and the whole world 
as his food. Second only to the direction to propagate and have 
dominion over the earth, according to the author of the first 
chapter of Genesis, is God's instruction to men to eat of the 
earth: 'Behold I have given you every herb bearing seed . . . and 
every tree, which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it 
shall be for meat. . . .' Man must eat in order to live; he must 
take the world into his body and transform it into himself, into 
flesh and blood. He is indeed that which he eats, and the whole 
world is presented as one all-embracing banquet table for man. 
And this image of the banquet remains, throughout the whole 
Bible, the central image of life. It is the image of life at its crea- 
tion and also the image of life at its end and fulfillment: 
'. . . that you eat and drink at my table in my Kingdom.'"8 



7. See John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, iv.xvii. 43-46; cf. 
idem., Selected Works: Tracts and Letters, ed. by Henry Beveridge and Jules 
Bonnet, seven vols. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, reprinted 1983), Vol. 
2, p. 188. 

8. Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World: Sacraments and 
Orthodoxy (New York: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1973), p. 11. 

477 



19:10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

The Eucharist is at the center of our life, and all of life flows 
out of this central liturgy. The "shape" of the Eucharistic liturgy, 
therefore, gives shape to the rest of life, the daily liturgy we fol- 
low as we pursue our calling to exercise dominion over the 
earth. The "rite of life" is patterned after the central ritual of 
communion, which is itself patterned after the liturgy of crea- 
tion set forth in Genesis 1: God took hold of the creation, sepa- 
rated it, distributed it, evaluated the work, and enjoyed it in 
sabbath rest. And this is the pattern of Holy Communion, as 
James B. Jordan observes: -''When we perform this rite on the 
Lord's Day, we are becoming readjusted, rehabituated, retrained 
in the right way to use the world. For Jesus Christ, on the night 
of His betrayal, (1) took bread and wine, (2) gave thanks, (3) 
broke the bread, (4) distributed the bread and wine, naming it 
His body and blood; then the disciples (5) tasted and evaluated 
it, eleven approving of it, and one rejecting it; and finally (6) the 
faithful rested and enjoyed it. 

"It is because the act of thanksgiving is the central difference 
between the Christian and the non-Christian that the liturgy of 
the Christian churches is called 'Holy Eucharist.' Eucharist 
means Thanksgiving. It is the restoration of true worship 
(thanksgiving) that restores the work of man (the six-fold action 
in all of life). This explains why the restoration of true worship 
takes primacy over cultural endeavors." 9 

10 St. John falls at the angel's feet to worship him, and the 
angel tersely replies: Don't do that! Why is this incident (re- 
peated in 22:8-9) recorded in the Book of Revelation? While it 
might seem to be unrelated to the great, cosmic issues of the 
prophecy, it actually comes close to the heart of St. John's mes- 
sage. At first glance, it appears to be a polemic against idolatry, 
certainly a central concern of the Book of Revelation. On closer 
inspection, however, such an interpretation presents serious 
difficulties. In the first place, we must remember that it is an in- 



9. James B. Jordan, "Studies in Genesis One: God's Rite for Life," in The 
Geneva Review, No. 21 (August 1985), p. 3; cf. idem, "Christian Piety: De- 
formed and Reformed," Geneva Papers (New Series), No. 1 (September 1985); 
on the centrality of worship, see idem, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposi- 
tion of Exodus 21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), pp. 
lof. , 41f. , 217f . 

478 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:10 

spired Apostle who performs this act of worship, in the course 
of receiving divine revelation; while it is not absolutely impossi- 
ble that St. John would commit the crime of idolatry in such a 
situation, it seems highly unlikely. In the second place, the 
angel's reason for refusing worship seems strange. Why does he 
not simply quote the commandment against having false gods, 
as Jesus did (Matt. 4:10) when the devil demanded that He wor- 
ship him? Instead of this, he launches into a brief explanation of 
the nature of prophecy: I am a fellow servant of yours and your 
brethren who hold the Testimony of Jesus; worship God! For 
the Testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy. 

The solution is to be found, first, in the fact that the term 
worship (in Greek, proskuneo) simply means "the custom of 
prostrating oneself before a person and kissing his feet, the hem 
of his garment, the ground, etc. ," 10 and can be used not only for 
the homage paid to God (or, sinfully, to a false god), but also 
for the proper reverence due superiors (see, e.g., the LXX usage 
in Gen. 18:2; 19:1; 23:7, 12; 27:29; 33:3, 6-7; 37:7, 9-10; 42:6; 
43:26,28; 49:8). It was completely appropriate for Lot to, "wor- 
ship" the angels who visited him, and for the sons of Israel to 
"worship" Joseph. Matthew uses the word to describe a slave's 
obeisance before his master (Matt. 18:26), and St. John employs 
it to record Christ's promise to the faithful Philadelphians, that 
the Jews would be forced "to come and bow down [proskuneo]" 
at their feet (Rev. 3:9). 

Assuming, therefore, that St. J ohn was not offering divine 
worship to the angel, but rather reverence to a superior, the 
angel's reply can be more clearly understood. A common theme 
throughout the Book of Revelation is that "all the Lord's peo- 
ple are prophets" (cf. Num. 11:29). All have ascended into the 
Lord's presence, taking their places at the heavenly Council 
around the throne in the Glory-Cloud. Before Pentecost it was 
appropriate for mere men to bow down before angels, but no 
longer. "Don't do that !" the angel cries: I am a fellow servant of 
yours and your brethren who hold the Testimony of Jesus. The 
angel is on an equal level with St. John and the rest of the Chris- 



10. William F. Arndt and F. Wilbur Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon of 
the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (Chicago: University 
of Chicago Press, 1957), p. 723. 

479 



19:10 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

tian community; thus he urges St. J ohn to worship God, to 
"draw near with confidence to the Throne of grace" (Heb.4:16). 
The fact that St. J ohn's brethren hold the Testimony of Jesus 
demonstrates that they are members of the Council, indwelt by 
the Spirit; for Jesus' Testimony is the Spirit of prophecy; the 
Spirit is wherever Jesus' Testimony is held and proclaimed. 

"With perfect justice, therefore, does Bossuet remark, 'that 
the angel rejects the worship in order to place the apostolical 
and prophetical ministry on a footing with that of the angels.' 
. . . The dissuasion is not based on the consideration that the 
worship trenches on God's glory, but on the consideration that it 
trenches on John's honour. It is as if it were said, go directly to 
God with thy worship, so that thou mayest not throw into the 
shade the glorious dignity bestowed on thee, and represented by 
thee." 11 

But what is it about the angel's proclamation that induced 
St. John to bow at his feet in the first place? "It is the Eucharistic 
reference which it contains. The primitive Church consecrated 
the eucharist by the great thanksgiving-prayer which names the 
rite. Lifting their hearts to heaven, they blessed God for his 
mighty acts of salvation, thereby both assuring their ultimate 
possession of Christ, and making real the foretaste they were 
about to receive in his sacramental body and blood. The exulta- 
tion of victory has passed into Eucharistic prayer in 19:1-8, but it 
is the angel's beatitude which first makes explicit the allusion to 
that blessed feast eaten in the kingdom of God and anticipated 
in the Church. St. John falls to adore, and every intermediary 
vanishes between himself and Christ." 12 

The Son of God Goes Forth to War (19:11-21) 

11 And I saw heaven opened; and behold, a white horse, and 
the One sitting upon it called Faithful and True; and in right- 
eousness He judges and wages war. 

12 And His eyes are a flame of fire, and upon His head are 
many diadems; and He has a name written which no one 
knows except Himself. 



11. E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John, two vols. (Cherry Hill, 
NJ: Mack Publishing Co., [1851] 1972), Vol. 2, p. 256. 

12. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), pp. 195f. 

480 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:11 

13 And He is clothed with a robe dipped in blood; and His 
name is called the Word of God. 

14 And the armies that are in heaven, clothed in fine linen, 
white and clean, were following Him on white horses. 

15 And from His mouth comes a sharp two-edged sword, so 
that with it He may smite the nations; and He Himself will 
rule them with a rod of iron; and He Himself treads the wine 
press of the wine of the fierce wrath of God, the Almighty. 

16 And on His robe and on His thigh He has a name written: 
KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS. 

17 And I saw one angel standing in the sun; and he cried out 
with a loud voice, saying to all the birds that fly in mid- 
heaven: Come, assemble for the great supper of God; 

18 in order that you may eat the flesh of kings and the flesh of 
commanders and the flesh of mighty men and the flesh of 
horses and of those who sit on them and the flesh of all men, 
both free men and slaves, and small and great. 

19 And I saw the Beast and the kings of the earth and their 
armies, assembled to make war against the One sitting upon 
the horse, and against His army. 

20 And the Beast was seized, and with him the False Prophet 
who performed the signs in his presence, by which he deceived 
those who had received the mark of the Beast and those who 
worshiped his image; these two were thrown alive into the 
lake of fire which burns with brimstone. 

21 And the rest were killed with the sword that came from the 
mouth of the One sitting upon the horse, and all the birds 
were filled with their flesh. 

11 This begins the final section of seven visions, each one 
opening with the phrase kaieidon, And I saw (19:11, 17, 19; 20:1, 
4, 1 1 ; 21:1). With the revelation of the Holy Eucharist St. John 
sees, as he has not seen before, heaven opened, and, as Farrer 
observes, "every intermediary vanishes between himself and 
Christ ." It is the invitation to Communion with Christ that 
opens heaven to the Church and reveals her Lord. 

St. John sees a white horse, the symbol of Christ's victory 
and dominion (6:2; cf. 14:14). It is important for the proper un- 
derstanding of this passage to note that the One sitting upon it is 
called Faithful and True: Christ rides forth to victory in His 
character as "the faithful and true Witness" (3 :14), as "the Word 
of God" (19:13). St. John is not describing the Second Coming 

481 



19:11 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

at the end of the world. He is describing the progress of the Gos- 
pel throughout the world, the universal proclamation of the 
message of salvation, which follows the First Advent of Christ. 
The connection with the message to Laodicea (3:14-22) is fur- 
ther established when we understand that this part of the proph- 
ecy contains several parallels with the Laodicean message. Far- 
rer says: "The ill-founded boast of present possession made by 
the Laodicean angel in 3:17 is echoed by the boast of the 
Jezebel-city in 18:7ff. And St. John has no sooner done with 
Jezebel in 19:3 than he provides the saints with pure raiment 
(19:8,3:18), invites them to the supper of the Lamb (19:9,3:20), 
and, opening the doors of heaven, reveals Christ as the Amen, 
the Faithful and True (19:9-13, 3:14)." 13 

In righteousness He judges and makes war: Christ rides 
forth to do battle in the earth, subduing us to Himself, ruling 
and defending us, "restraining and conquering all His and our 
enemies," as the Westminster Shorter Catechism says (Q. 26), 
rendering justice throughout the world according to the law of 
God, in fulfillment of the Messianic prophecies: 

He will judge Thy people with righteousness, 
And Thine afflicted with justice. (Ps. 72:2) 

Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice; 

Let the sea roar, and all its fulness; 

Let the field exult, and all that is in it. 

Then all the trees of the forest will sing for joy 

Before the Lord, for He is coming; 

For He is coming to judge the earth. 

He will judge the world in righteousness, 

And the peoples in His faithfulness. (Ps. 96:11-13) 

He will not judge by what His eyes see, 

Nor make a decision by what His ears hear; 

But with righteousness He will judge the poor, 

And decide with fairness for the afflicted of the earth; 

And He will strike the earth with the rod of His mouth, 

And with the breath of His lips He will slay the wicked. 

(Isa. 11:3-4) 



13. Ibid., p. 85. 

482 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:12 

Behold, days are coming, declares the Lord, 

When I shall raise up for David a righteous Branch; 

And He will reign as King and act wisely 

And do justice and righteousness in the land. 

In His days J udah will be saved, 

And Israel will dwell securely; 

And this is His name by which He will be called: 

The Lord Our Righteousness. (Jer. 23:5-6) 

12 The figure on the white horse is the same as the Son of 
Man, the First and the Last, the Living One, of St. John's first 
vision, for His eyes are a flame of fire (cf. 1:14): He is the omnis- 
cient Lord whose discerning scrutiny is "able to judge the 
thoughts and intentions of the heart" (Heb. 4:12). This majestic 
figure is already victorious, many times over, as symbolized by 
the many diadems He wears. 

The gold plate on the forehead of the high priest bore the 
sacred Name of the Lord; appropriately, after taking note of 
the many diadems on Christ's brow, St. John sees that He has a 

name written. But this is a name which no one knows except 
Himself. How are we to understand this? As we saw at 2:17, the 
New Testament use of the words for know (ginoskd and Olda) is 
influenced by a Hebrew idiom, in which the verb to know ac- 
quires related meanings: to acknowledge, to acknowledge as 
one's own, and to own (see, e.g., Gen. 4:1; Ex. 1:8; Ps. 1:6; Jer. 
28:9; Ezek. 20:5; Zech. 14:7; Matt. 7:23; John 10:4-5; Rem. 
8:29; 1 Cor. 8:3; 2 Tim. 2:19). 14 Thus, the point in this verse is 
not that no one can know what the name is (for in fact, as we 
shall see, we do "know" the name, in the cognitive sense), but 
that He alone properly owns the name; it belongs only to Him. 
This is reinforced by the chiastic structure of the passage: 

A. He has a name written which no one owns except Himself (v. 12b) 
B. He is clothed with a robe dipped in blood (v. 13a) 
C. His name is called the Word of God (v. 13b) 
C. From His mouth comes a sharp two-edged sword (v. 15a) 
B. He treads the wine press of the fierce wrath of God (v.l5b) 
A. On His robe and on His thigh He has a name written: KING OF 
KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS (v.16) 



14. See the brief discussion in Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980), p. 130. 

483 



19:13-14 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

The sharp, two-edged sword of 15a answers to 13b's charac- 
terization of Christ as the Word of God; 15b's information that 
Christ treads the wine press of wrath explains how His robe be- 
came stained with blood in 13 a; and 16 tells us the name that 12b 
says Christ uniquely owns. 15 

13 As we have noted above, Christ's robe dipped in blood is 
explained by v. 15b. The blood is, clearly, that of Christ's 
enemies, the "grapes of wrath"; yet (as we saw on 14:20), there is 
a sense in which the bloody robe is stained by Christ's own sacri- 
fice of Himself as well. For the vision is truly an allegory of the 
Incarnation: Here alone in Revelation, as in the Prologue to His 
Gospel (John 1:1, 14), St. John calls Christ the Word, speaking 
of His pre-existence and divine nature, and of His becoming 
flesh, tabernacling among us. In the passage before us, more- 
over, we have not only an allegory of His Incarnation, but of 
His Atonement, Resurrection, Ascension, and Enthronement as 
well. This is not "only" the story of the outpouring of wrath on 
Israel. It is the story of Jesus Christ, the King of kings. We see 
here the Advent of the Son of Man: The heavens are opened, 
and He descends to earth to do battle with His enemies; stained 
with blood, He wins the victory. 

14 But Christ is not alone in this victory. He is followed by 
the armies that are in heaven, "the called and chosen and faith- 
ful" who are with Him in battle (17:14). Again we must remem- 
ber that from the perspective of the New Testament, the Church 
is "in heaven": We are God's tabernacle in heaven (7:15; 12:12; 
13:6), we are seated with Christ in the heavenly places (Eph. 
2:6), we have come to the heavenly Jerusalem, and to myriads of 
angels in festal assembly, and to the Church of the first-born 
who are enrolled in heaven (Heb. 12:22-23). The armies are 
composed of Christians (it is possible that angels are in view 
here as well), riding on white horses with their Lord in His ag- 
gressive and triumphant campaign through the earth, bringing 
the Word of God to the world. Because the armies of heaven are 
the Bride, they are clothed in fine linen, white and clean. 

15. Ibid. 

484 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:15 

15 From the mouth of the incarnate Word of God proceeds 
a sharp two-edged sword. St. John has used this imagery before 
(1:16; 2:16); the sword (especially as it comes from the mouth) is 
a clear Biblical symbol for the powerful "prophetic word which 
is creative and dynamic and brings to pass what it pronounces. 
The word of a true prophet, such as the rider, transforms word 
into action; that of the false prophet, such as the second beast, 
is ineffectual." 16 The Word of God is used not only in battle, to 
slay God's enemies (Eph. 6:17), but also in the Church, to cut 
apart the sacrifice (Rem. 12:1-2): "For the Word of God is living 
and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing 
as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and mar- 
row, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart, 
And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things 
are open and laid bare to the eyes of Him with whom we have to 
do" (Heb. 4:12-13). The pre-incarnate Christ says: 

Listen to Me, O islands, 

And pay attention, you peoples from afar. 

The Lord called Me from the womb; 

From the inward parts of My mother He named Me. 

And He has made My mouth like a sharp sword. (Isa. 49:1-2) 

In the same way, God wields His prophets like a sword: 

I have hewn them in pieces by the prophets; 

I have slain them by the words of My mouth. (Hos.6:5) 

Christ uses the Sword of the Spirit to smite the nations: He 
conquers by His mouth. Again, it is not the Second Coming that 
is portrayed here, but rather Christ's defeat of the nations by 
His bare Word. In Matthew 24:29-31, it is "immediately after" 
the destruction of Jerusalem that the conversion of the nations 
begins, as Christ sends his angels/ministers throughout the 
world to gather in the elect. 17 

The Wisdom of Solomon (18:15-16) speaks of God's deliver- 
ance of Israel from Egypt with imagery similar to St. John's pic- 



16. J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and 
Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1975), p. 323. 

17. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
ion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 103ff. 

485 



19:15 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ture in this passage: "Thine Almighty Word leaped down from 
heaven out of Thy royal throne, as a fierce man of war into the 
midst of a land of destruction, and brought Thine unfeigned 
commandment as a sharp sword, and standing up filled all 
things with death; and it touched the heaven, but it stood upon 
the earth." As Isaiah wrote, "He will strike the earth with the 
rod of His mouth, and with the breath of His lips He will slay 
the wicked" (Isa. 11:4). 'The 'mouth like a sharp sword' is the 
symbol of the prophet, whose utterance has a cutting edge to it, 
because he speaks the word of God. . . . Thus the only weapon 
the Rider needs, if he is to break the opposition of his enemies, 
and establish God's reign of justice and peace, is the proclama- 
tion of the gospel." 18 Thus "the whole course of 'the expansion 
of Christianity' is here in a figure: the conversion of the Empire; 
the conversion of the Western nations which rose on the ruins of 
the Empire; the conversion of the South and the far East, still 
working itself out in the history of our own time. In all St. John 
would have seen Christ using the Sword of His mouth; the white 
horse and his Rider, the diadem-crowned head, the invisible 
armies of heaven." 19 

Christ conquers the nations in order to rule [or, shepherd] 
them with a rod of iron. 'The work of the Pastor, the Guide and 
Ruler of souls (1 Pet. 2:25), follows that of the Evangelist; the 
heathen are first to be reduced to obedience, and then brought 
under the discipline of Christ," 20 His Father had commanded 
Him: 

Ask of Me, and I will surely give the nations as Thine inheritance, 

And the very ends of the earth as Thy possession. 

Thou shalt rule 21 them with a rod of iron, 

Thou shalt shatter them like earthenware. (Ps. 2:8-9) 

Psalm 2 goes on to declare that the kings of the earth must 



18. G. B. Caird, A Commentary on the Revelation of St. John the Divine 
(New York: Harper and Row, 1966), p. 245. 

19. H. B. Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publi- 
cations, [1911] 1977), p. 254. 

20. Ibid. 

21. The Hebrew verb can be read either as break or rule (shepherd), de- 
pending on the vowel-points used. The LXX translated it as rule, and this 
reading was adopted by the New Testament writers. 

486 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:15 

submit to the Son or else perish under His wrath. Christ has 
come into His inheritance; He has received His Kingdom from 
the Father (Dan. 7:13-14), having been installed on His heavenly 
throne "far above all rule and authority and power and domin- 
ion" (Eph. 1:21). As universal Sovereign He Himself treads the 
wine press of the wine of the fierce wrath of God, the Almighty 
(cf. 14:19-20): 

Who is this who comes from Edom, 

With garments of glowing colors from Bozrah, 

This One who is majestic in His apparel, 

Marching in the greatness of His strength? 

It is I who speak in righteousness, mighty to save. 

Why is Your apparel red, 

And Your garments like the one who treads in the wine press? 

I have trodden the wine trough alone, 

And from the peoples there was no man with Me. 

I also trod them in My anger, 

And trampled them in My wrath; 

And their juice is sprinkled on My garments, 

And I stained all My raiment. 

For the Day of Vengeance was in My heart, 

And My year of redemption has come. 

And I looked, and there was no one to help, 

And I was astonished and there was no one to uphold; 

So My own arm brought salvation to Me; 

And My wrath upheld Me. 

And I trod down the peoples in My anger, 

And I made them drunk in My wrath, 

And I brought down their juice to the earth. (Isa. 63:1-6) 

The text in Isaiah emphasizes that Christ singlehandedly ac- 
complishes this work: "I have trodden . . . alone"; "there was 
no one to help"; "My own arm brought salvation to Me," etc.; 
St. John similarly uses the expression He Himself twice in this 
verse, stressing that while Christ is accompanied by His heavenly 
armies, the victory is based on His work alone. The work of sal- 
vation is performed solely by the Lord Jesus Christ; the bless- 
ings and judgments that attend the salvation of the elect are set 
in place by Him. 

487 



19:16 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Come, behold the works of the LoRD, 
Who has wrought desolations in the earth. 
He makes wars to cease to the end of the earth; 
He breaks the bow and cuts the spear in two; 
He burns the chariots with fire. (Ps. 46:8-9) 

"We are thus bound to believe that those occurrences by 
which guilt y nations are scourged and chastised for their sins, 
are not merely brought about in providence, but ordered and 
directed by the Mediator. And whether, therefore, we behold 
the desolating sword cutting off the inhabitants, or the blasting 
mildew destroying the crops, or commercial stagnation ob- 
structing the sources of wealth, or wasting disease stalking with 
ghastly power over a land, or the upheavings of popular com- 
motion overturning the foundations of social order, we recog- 
nize the wisdom, and might, and righteous retribution of Prince 
Messiah, carrying into execution the divine decree, The nation 
and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish: yea, those na- 
tions shall be utterly wasted" (Isa. 60:12). 22 

16 St. John sees Christ's title "which no one knows except 
Himself (v. 12) written on His robe and on His thigh, the place 
where the sword is worn (cf. Ps. 45:3). "The title is the ground, 
not the result, of the coming victory; he will conquer the mon- 
ster and the kings because he is already King of kings and Lord 
of lords." 23 Riding out on His war-horse, followed by His army 
of saints, He conquers the nations with the Word of God, the 
Gospel. This is a symbolic declaration of hope, the assurance 
that the Word of God will be victorious throughout the world, 
so that Christ's rule will be established universally. Jesus Christ 
will be acknowledged everywhere as King of all kings, Lord over 
all lords. From the beginning of Revelation, Christ's message to 
His Church has been a command to overcome, to conquer (2:1, 
11, 17, 26-28; 3:5, 12, 21); now He assures the suffering Church 
that, regardless of the fierce persecution by Israel and Rome, He 
and His people will in fact be victorious over all enemies. 



22. William Symington, Messiah the Prince: or,The Mediatorial Dominion 
of Jesus Christ (Philadelphia: The Christian Statesman Publishing Co., [1839] 
1884), p. 224. 

23.Caird,p. 246. 

488 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:17-18 

All nations are absolutely required to be Christian, in their 
official capacity as well as in the personal character of their indi- 
vidual citizens. Any nation that does not submit to the all- 
embracing rule of King Jesus will perish; all nations shall be 
Christianized some day. It is only a matter of time. Jesus Christ 
is the universal Sovereign, and He will be recognized as such 
throughout the earth, in this world as well as in the next, in time 
as well as in eternity. He has promised: "I will be exalted among 
the nations, I will be exalted in the earth" (Ps. 46:10). The Lord 

of hosts is with us. 

17-18 This is the second of the final seven visions, each of 
which begins with the phrase And I saw; thus, while it is cer- 
tainly related to the subject of the previous vision, it is not sim- 
ply a continuation of it. As we have seen, the chapter begins 
with a feast, the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, the sacred Eucha- 
ristic meal of the Church before her Lord. But another great 
feast is proclaimed here. The Sun of Righteousness has arisen, 
with healing in His wings (Mai. 4:2); but He also brings an angel 
standing in the sun (the ruler of the Day, Gen. 1:16) who issues 
an invitation to all the birds that fly in midheaven, the birds of 
prey. We have seen "midheaven" as the place in which the Eagle 
warned of woe (8:13), and in which an angel invited the rulers of 
the earth to embrace the eternal Gospel (14:6). Now the angel in- 
vites the eagles to the Great Supper of God, where they may glut 
themselves on the flesh of Christ's enemies: the flesh of kings 
and the flesh of commanders and the flesh of mighty men and 
the flesh of horses and of those who sit on them and the flesh of 
all men, both free men and slaves, and small and great. We 
noted at 8:13 that a basic curse of the covenant is that of being 
eaten by birds of prey (cf. Deut. 28:26, 49). Israelis now a sacri- 
ficial corpse (Matt. 24:28), and there is no longer anyone who 
can drive away the scavengers (cf. G?n. 15:11; Deut. 28:26). 24 



24. Genesis 15 describes the ratification ceremony of God's covenant with 
Abram. After Abram cuts the sacrificial animals apart and arranges the halves 
opposite each other, the unclean birds of prey descend to attack the carcasses, 
and Abram drives them away (v. 11). Gordon Wenham interprets this as a 
promise that Israel, through Abramic faith and obedience (cf. Gen. 26:5), will 
be protected from the attacks of unclean nations; Gordon Wenham, "The Sym- 
bolism of the Animal Rite in Genesis 15: A Response to G. EHasel, JSOT 19 
(1981)61-78," in Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 22 (1981), 134-37. 

489 



19:17-18 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

St. John's language is borrowed from God's invitation through 
Ezekiel "to every bird and beast of the field" to devour the corp- 
ses of His enemies, the armies of the heathen who had made war 
upon Israel: 

Assemble and come, gather from every side to My sacrifice 
which I am going to sacrifice for you, as a great sacrifice on the 
mountains of Israel, that you may eat flesh and drink blood. You 
shall eat the flesh of mighty men, and drink the blood of the 
princes of the earth, as though they were rams, lambs, goats, 
and bulls, all of them fadings of Bashan. So you will eat fat until 
you are glutted, and drink blood until you are drunk, from My 
sacrifice which I have sacrificed for you. And you will be glutted 
at My table with horses and charioteers, with mighty men and all 
the men of war, declares the Lord. (Ezek. 39:17-20) 

The meaning is clear: Those nations that refuse to submit to 
the lordship of Christ, as Psalm 2 commands, will be utterly 
destroyed. God requires of all men and institutions nothing less 
than complete subservience to His ordained Christocracy. 

Peter J. Leithart observes that the feasting of the scavengers 
in Ezekiel 39 has a cleansing effect on the Land. "The expanded 
invitation to the birds of prey in verses 17-20 comes immediately 
after a discussion of cleansing the land through the burial of the 
dead (cf. Deut. 21:22f.). Perhaps the birds help to cleanse the 
land by feeding on the dead bodies which defile it. Moreover, 
the Lord invites the birds to eat a sacrificial meal. Sacrifice im- 
plies cleansing and restoration. Thus, in Ezekiel 39, the image of 
the birds of prey not only emphasizes the totality of the judg- 
ment, but also points to the obverse of judgment, cleansing and 
redemption." 25 

Leithart continues: "Is the idea of cleansing found also in 
Revelation 19:17-18? There is no direct mention of cleansing, 
nor of sacrifice. Still, for several reasons, the Revelation passage 
can be understood as a cleansing. First, the events of 20:4-6 sug- 
gest that by His victory, the Warrior cleanses the earth of the in- 
fluence of the beast and the false prophet, and this, combined 
with the fall of Babylon and the binding of the dragon, inaugur- 



25. Peter J. Leithart, "Biblical-Theological Paper: Revelation 19:17-18," 

Westminster Theological Seminary, 1985, p. 11. 

490 



THE FEASTS OF THE KINGDOM 19:19-21 

ates a period of unprecedented power for the Church. Second, 
the totality of the Warrior's victory is so great that not even the 
slain bodies of His opponents remain. All traces of the beast's 
armies are obliterated. Finally, considered systematically, judg- 
ment never occurs apart from accompanying grace. The judg- 
ment of Pharaoh is the liberation of Israel. So also here, the 
judgment of the beasts and their armies cleanses the earth of 
their idolatry and liberates the saints ," 26 

19-21 The third vision in this section, marked again by the 
words And I saw, reveals the defeat of Leviathan and Behemoth 
in their war against the Kingdom of Christ: The two Beasts are 
seized and thrown alive into the lake of fire, the fiery Laver (cf. 
15:2) which burns with brimstone. The imagery is borrowed 
from the story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah ("fire 
and brimstone") combined with that of the rebels Korah, 
Dathan, and Abiram, who with their households were swallowed 
up by the earth's mouth: "So they and all that belonged to them 
went down alive into Sheol; and the earth closed over them, and 
they perished from the midst of the assembly" (Num. 16:31-33). 
St. John's point, therefore, is not to provide a detailed personal 
eschatology of the Beast and the False Prophet; still less is he at- 
tempting to describe the Fall of Rome in 410 or 476. Rather, the 
Lake of Fire is his symbolic description of the utter defeat and 
complete destruction of these enemies in their attempt to seize 
the Kingdom: The evil personifications of pagan Rome and 
apostate Israel are ruined and overthrown. Rome, like Sodom, 
is destroyed by fire and brimstone; Israel's false prophets, like 
Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, are swallowed up alive. 

There is one notable contrast, however: Whereas the rest of 
Korah's followers were consumed by a blast of fire "from the 
Lord," the rest of the Beasts' followers -the kings of the earth 
— are killed with the sword that came from the mouth of Him 
who sat upon the horse. The message of the Gospel, the Word- 
sword of the Spirit, goes out from Christ's mouth and destroys 
His enemies by converting them, piercing them to the dividing 
asunder of soul and spirit, of joints and marrow, judging the 
thoughts and intentions of their hearts. The Beasts are doubly 

26. Ibid., p. 12. 

491 



19:19-21 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

losers: Not only are they defeated, but the very nations that they 
led in battle against Christ are conquered by His victorious 
Word. 

At their very worst, Leviathan, Behemoth, and their co- 
conspirators could do no more than fulfill the decrees of the 
sovereign God (17:17). He ordained their every move, and He 
ordained their destruction. The nations rage, but God laughs: 
He has already set up His King on His holy mountain, and all 
nations will be ruled by Him (Psalm 2). A 11 power in heaven and 
earthhas been given to Christ (Matt. 28:18); as Martin Luther 
sang, "He must win the battle." As the Gospel progresses 
throughout the world it will win increasing victories, until all 
kingdoms become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of His Christ; 
and He will reign forever and ever. We must not concede to the 
enemy even one square inch of ground in heaven or on earth. 
Christ and His army are riding forth, conquering and to con- 
quer, and we through Him will inherit all things. 



492 



20 
THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 

What is the position of the historic, orthodox Church on the 
question of the Millennium? Can the doctrine of the Church be 
accurately described as either postmillennialist or amillennialist? 
In general, the difference between those traditionally called 
"amillennialists" and those traditionally called "postmillennial- 
ists" has been set in terms of their interpretations of the "thou- 
sand years" (in Latin, the millennium) of Revelation 20. "Amil- 
lennialists" have usually seen this text as a reference to the con- 
dition of the saints reigning in heaven, while "postmillennialists" 
have understood it as a description of the saints' dominion on 
earth. As we shall see, however, this way of framing the ques- 
tion can actually obscure some very important facts about the 
Christian view of "the Millennium." If we wish to gain an under- 
standing of the orthodox position, we must understand that the 
answer to this precise question cannot be determined primarily 
by the exegesis of particular texts. For example, "amillennialists" 
often disagree with each other about the precise nature of the 
resurrection(s) in Revelation 20 (to cite only one of several ma- 
jor points in dispute). And Benjamin Warfield, perhaps the 
leading "postmillennialist" scholar of the early part of this cen- 
tury, proposed an exegesis of Revelation 20 which most theolog- 
ians would consider to be classically "amillennialist"! ' 

Our framing of the question, therefore, should be broad 
enough to account for the diversity of approach among the var- 
ious amillennialist and postmillennialist camps. In essence, the 
question of the Millennium centers on the mediatorial Kingdom 
of Christ: When did (or will) Christ's Kingdom begin? And once 
we pose the question this way, something amazing happens — 



1. Benjamin B. Warfield, "The Millennium and the Apocalypse," Biblical 
Doctrines (New York: Oxford University Press, 1929), pp. 643-64. 

493 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

something almost unheard of in Christian circles: Unity! From 
the Day of Pentecost onward, orthodox Christians have recog- 
nized that Christ's reign began at His Resurrection/Ascension 
and continues until all things have been thoroughly subdued 
under His feet, as St. Peter clearly declared (Acts 2:30-36). "The 
Millennium," in these terms, is simply the Kingdom of Christ. It 
was inaugurated at Christ's First Advent, has been in existence 
for almost two thousand years, and will goon until Christ's Sec- 
ond Advent at the Last Day. In "millennial" terminology, this 
means that the return of Christ and the resurrection of all men 
will take place after "the Millennium." In this objective sense, 
therefore, orthodox Christianity has always been postmillen- 
nialist. That is to say, regardless of how "the Millennium" has 
been conceived (whether in a heavenly or an earthly sense) - i.e., 
regardless of the technical exegesis of certain points in Revelation 
20 - orthodox Christians have always confessed that Jesus Christ 
will return after ("post") the period designated as 'the thousand 
years" has ended. In this sense, all "amillennialists" are also "post- 
millennialists." At the same time, orthodox Christianity has 
always been amillennialist (i.e., non-millenarian). The historic 
Church has always rejected the heresy of Millenarianism (in past 
centuries, this was called chiliasm, meaning thousand-year-km). 
The notion that the reign of Christ is something wholly future, 
to be brought in by some great social cataclysm, is not a Chris- 
tian doctrine. It is an unorthodox teaching, generally espoused 
by heretical sects on the fringes of the Christian Church. 2 Now, 



2. Premillennialism seems to have been originated by the Ebionite arch- 
heretic Cerinthus, a "false apostle" who was an opponent of both St. Paul and 
St. John. Cerinthus claimed that his doctrine of the Millennium had been re- 
vealed to him by angels; and it is interesting that St. Paul's epistle to the Gala- 
tians - which is greatly concerned to refute the legalistic heresies of Cerinthus 
- begins with these words: "But even though we, or an angel from heaven, 
should preach to you a gospel contrary to that which we have preached to you, 
let him be accursed" (Gal. 1:8)! St. Irenaeus records that St. John ran out of a 
public bathhouse upon encountering Cerinthus, and cried: "Let us flee, lest 
even the bath-house fall, because Cerinthus, the enemy of the truth, is 
within!" For an account of Cerinthus and his heresies, see St. Irenaeus, 
Against Heresies, i.xxvi.1-2; iii.iii.4; cf. Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, 
iii.xxviii.1-6; iv.xiv.6;vii.xxv.2-3. As Louis Bouyer points out in The Spirituality 
of the New Testament and the Fathers (Minneapolis: The Seabury Press, 1963, 
p. 173), some early Church Fathers (e.g. Justin Martyr) adopted premillennial 
liberalism because of their heathen background, to which the Biblical literary 
genres and imagery were unfamiliar. The orthodox, "Augustinian" view repre- 
sents a more mature understanding of Scriptural symbolism and a more con- 
sistent Christian worldview. 

494 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 

Millenarianism can take two general forms. It can be either Pre- 
millenarianism (with the Second Coming as the cataclysm that 
ushers in the Millennium), or Postaiillennarianism (with the 
Social Revolution as the cataclysm). Examples of the first 
branch of Chiliasm would be, of course, the Ebionite movement 
of the Early Church period, and the modern Dispensationalism 
of the Scofield-Ryrie school. 3 Examples of the Postmillennarian 
heresy would be easy to name as well: the Munster Revolt of 
1534, Nazism, and Marxism (whether "Christian" or otherwise). 4 
Orthodox Christianity rejects both forms of the Millenarian 
heresy. Christianity opposes the notion of any new redemptive 
cataclysm occurring before the Last Judgment. Christianity is 
anti-revolutionary. Thus, while Christians have always looked 
forward to the salvation of the world, believing that Christ died 



3. Perhaps the most basic argument against premillennialism is simply that 
the Bible never speaks of a thousand-year reign of the saints - outside of Reve- 
lation 20, a highly symbolic and complex passage in the most highly symbolic 
and complex book of the Bible! Graeme Goldsworthy observes in The Lamb 
and the Lion: The Gospel in Revelation (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publish- 
ers, 1984): "It is highly unlikely, to say the least, that something so dramatically 
significant as a thousand year reign of a reappeared Christ on earth before this 
age ends should nowhere else be mentioned in the New Testament" (p. 127). 
Some works that refute premillennialism, from various perspectives, are: Jay 
Adams, The Time Is at Hand (Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Pub- 
lishing Co., [1966] 1970); Oswald T. Allis, Prophecy and the CAwrcA (Nutley, 
NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1945, 1947); Loraine Boett- 
ner, The Millennium (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publish- 
ing Co., revised ed., 1984); David Brown, Christ's Second Coming: Will It Be 
Premillennial? (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1876] 1983); W. J. Grier, 
The Momentous Event: A Discussion of Scripture Teaching on the Second 

Advent (Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, [1945] 1970); Arthur H. 
Lewis, The Dark Side of the Millennium: The Problem of Evil in Rev. 20:1-10 
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1980); Rousas John Rushdoony, God's 
Plan for Victory: The Meaning of Postmillennialism (Tyler, TX: Thoburn 
Press, 1977); Ralph Woodrow, His Truth Is Marching On: Advanced Studies 
on Prophecy in the Light of History (Riverside, CA: Ralph Woodrow Evan- 
gelistic Association, 1977). 

4. For accounts of heretical (post) millenarian movements, see Igor Shafare- 
vich, 77ze Socialist Phenomenon, William Tjalsma, trans. (New York: Harper 
and Row, Publishers, 1980); Norman Cohn, The Pursuit of the Millennium: 
Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages (New 
York: Oxford University Press, 1957; revised, 1970); Otto Friedrich, The End 
of the World: A History (New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1982), 
pp. 143-77; David Chilton, Productive Christians in an Age of Guilt-Manipu- 
lators: A Biblical Response to Ronald J.Sider (Tyler, TX: Institute for Chris- 
tian Economics, third cd., 1985), pp. 321-42. 

495 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

and rose again for that purpose, they have also seen the King- 
dom's work as a leavening influence, gradually transforming the 
world into the image of God. The definitive cataclysm has al- 
ready taken place, in the finished work of Christ. Depending on 
the specific question being asked, therefore, orthodox Christi- 
anity can be considered either amillennial or postmillennial - 
because, in reality, it is both. 

One further point should be understood: In addition to be- 
ing both "amillennialist" and "postmillennialist," the orthodox 
Christian Church has been generally optimistic in her view of 
the power of the Gospel to convert the nations. In my book 
Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion (Ft. 
Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), I opened each chapter with 
a quotation from the great St. Athanasius on the subject of the 
victory of the Gospel throughout the world and the inevitable 
conversion of all nations to Christianity. The point was not to 
single out St. Athanasius as such; numerous statements express- 
ing the Hope of the Church for the worldwide triumph of the 
Gospel can be found throughout the writings of the great Fath- 
ers and teachers, in every age of Christianity. 'Even more signifi- 
cantly, the universal belief in the coming victory can be seen in 
the action of the Church in history. Christians never supposed 
that their high calling was to work for some sort of detente with 
the Enemy. "Pluralism" was never regarded by the orthodox as a 
worthy goal. The Church has always recognized that God sent 
His only begotten Son in order to redeem the world, and that 



5. See St. Augustine, The City of God, Book XX. On St. Augustine and the 
influence of his postmillennial philosophy of history, see Peter Brown, Aug- 
ustine of Hippo (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 
1967); Charles Norris Cochrane, Christianity and Classical Culture: A Study 
of Thought and Action from Augustus to Augustine (London: Oxford Uni- 
versit y Press, [1940, 1944], 1957); Robert Nisbet, History of the Idea of Prog- 
ress (New York: Basic Books, 1980), pp. 47-76. On the extensive Reformed 
heritage of postmillennialism, from John Calvin to the late nineteenth century, 
see Greg L. Bahnsen, "The Prima Facie Acceptability of Postmillennialism," 
The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, Vol. Ill, No. 2 (Winter, 1976-77), 
pp. 48-105, esp. pp. 68-105; James B. Jordan, "A Survey of Southern Presby- 
terian Millennial Views Before 1930," The Journal of Christian Reconstruc- 
tion, Vol. Ill, No. 2 (Winter, 1976-77), pp. 106-21; J. A. de Jong, As the Waters 
Cover the Sea: Millennial Revival and the Interpretation of Prophecy 
(Kampen: J. H. Kok, 1970); J. Marcellus Kik, An Eschatology of Victory 
(Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1971), pp. 3-29; Iain 
Murray, The Puritan Hope: A Study in Revival and the Interpretation of 
Prophecy (London: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1971). 

496 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 

He will be satisfied with nothing less than what He paid for. 

When the early missionaries from the East first ventured into 
the demonized lands of our pagan forefathers, they had not the 
slightest intention of developing peaceful coexistence with war- 
locks and their terrorizing deities. When St. Boniface came up 
against Thor's sacred oak tree in his mission to the heathen Ger- 
mans, he simply chopped it down and built a chapel out of the 
wood. Thousands of Thor-worshipers, seeing that their god 
had failed to strike St. Boniface with lightning, converted to 
Christianity on the spot. As for St. Boniface, he was unruffled 
by the incident. He knew that there was only one true God of 
thunder - the Triune Jehovah. 

There is nothing strange about this. The attitude of Hope, 
the expectation of victory, is an absolutely fundamental charac- 
teristic of Christianity. 6 The advance of the Church through the 
ages is inexplicable apart from it - just as it is also inexplicable 
apart from the fact that the Hope is true, the fact that Jesus 
Christ has defeated the powers and shall reign "from the River 
to the ends of the earth." W. G. T. Shedd wrote: "Apart from the 
power and promise of God, the preaching of such a religion as 
Christianity, to such a population as that of paganism, is the 
sheerest Quixotism. It crosses all the inclinations, and condemns 
all the pleasures of guilty man. The preaching of the Gospel 
finds its justification, its wisdom, and its triumph, only in the at- 
titude and relation which the infinite and almighty God sustains 
to it. It is His religion, and therefore it must ultimately become a 
universal religion."7 

With the rise of divergent eschatologies over the last two 
centuries, the traditional evangelical optimism of the Church 
was tagged with the term "postmillennialism," whether the so- 
called "postmillennialists" liked it or not. This has had positive 
and negative results. On the plus side, it is (as we have seen) a 
technically accurate description of orthodoxy; and it carries the 
connotation of optimism. On the minus side, it can too often be 
confused with heretical millenarianism. And, while "amillen- 



6. Consider the fact that the compilers of The Book of Common Prayer 
provided "Tables for Finding Holy Days" all the way tOA.D. 8400! Clearly, 
they were digging in for the "long haul," and did not expect an imminent "rap- 
ture" of the Church. 

7. W. G. T. Shedd, Sermons to the Spiritual Man (London: The Banner of 
Truth Trust, [1884] 1972), p. 421. 

497 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

nialism" rightly expresses the orthodox abhorrence of apocalyp- 
tic revolution, it carries (both by name and by historic associa- 
tion) a strong connotation of defeatisms The present writer 
therefore calls himself a "postmillennialist ," but also seeks to be 
sensitive to the inadequacies of current theological terminology. 9 
This "generic" postmillennialism holds that Jesus Christ es- 
tablished His mediatorial Kingdom by His death, resurrection, 
and ascension to the heavenly Throne, and as the Second Adam 
rules over all creation until the end of the world, when He shall 
come again to judge the living and the dead; that He is conquer- 
ing all nations by the Gospel, extending the fruits of His victory 
throughout the world, thereby fulfilling the dominion mandate 
originally given by God to Adam; that eventually, through the 
outpouring of the Holy Spirit, "the earth will be full of the 
knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea" (Isa. 11:9); 
and that the Biblical promises of abundant blessing, in every 
area of life, will be poured out by God upon the whole world, in 
covenantal response to the faithfulness of His people. 10 



8. Some have sought to remedy this by styling themselves "optimistic amil- 
lennialists," a term that has nothing wrong with it except a mouthful of sylla- 
bles (the term "non-chiliastic postmillennialist" suffers from the same 
problem). 

9. The foregoing is not intended to minimize certain other areas of dispute 
among the various eschatological schools of thought. The vexed issue of "com- 
mon grace" — which James Jordan has more accurately termed "crumbs from 
the children's table" (Mark 7:27-28)- is particularly crucial to the debate, and 
so I have included Gary North's essay on "Common Grace, Eschatology, and 
Biblical Law" as an appendix to this volume. 

10. This is perhaps as good a place as any to comment on what is currently 
the most intellectually disrespectable "objection" to postmillennialism: the no- 
tion that the earth cannot experience a future period of great physical blessing 
because the world is "running out" of natural resources, becoming overpopu- 
lated, and/or dying of pollution (etc.) - popularized by heavily slanted and 
even deliberately deceptive "studies" such as Global 2000 and Limits to 
Growth. In the first place, this objection completely disregards the fact that, 
according to the Bible, both abundance and famine, productivity and pollu- 
tion, come from the hand of Almighty God; that He can and does reward obe- 
dience with blessing, and disobedience with the curse (Deut. 8:1-20; 28:1-68; 
Isa. 24:1-6). Secondly, the "running-out-of-resources" and "overpopulation" 
(etc., etc.) arguments are completely baseless in both hard data and sound eco- 
nomic theory. SeeWarren T. Brockes.The Economy in Mind (New York: Uni- 
verse Books, 1982); Edith Efron, The Apocalyptics: Cancer and the Big Lie 
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984); Herbert L London, Why Are They 
Lying to Our Children? (New York: Stein and Day, 1984); Charles Maurice 
and Charles W. Smithson, The Doomsday Myth: 10,000 Years of Economic 

498 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:1-3 

The Binding of Satan (20:1-3) 

1 And I saw an Angel coming down from heaven, having the 
key of the Abyss and a great chain in His hand. 

2 And He laid hold of the Dragon, the Serpent of old, who is 
the devil ?nd Satan, who deceives the whole world, and 
bound him for a thousand years, 

3 and threw him into the abyss, and shut it and sealed it over 
him, so that he should not deceive the nations any longer, 
until the thousand years were completed; after these things 
he must be released for a short time. 

1 The importance of the imagery in this passage is heightened 
by its centrality as the fourth of seven visions introduced by the 
expression And I saw (kai eidon;d. 19:11, 17, 19; 20:4, 11; 21:1). 
St. John sees an Angel coming down from heaven, having the 
key of the Abyss and a great chain in His hand. Again, as in 10:1 
and 18:1 (cf. 12:7), this is the Lord Jesus Christ, who as 
Mediator is the Angel (Messenger) of the Covenant (Mai. 2:7; 
3:1). His absolute control and authority over the Abyss are sym- 
bolized by the key and the great chain. The author sets up a 
striking contrast: Satan, the evil star that fell from heaven, was 
briefly given the key to the Abyss (9:1); but Christ descended 
from heaven, having as His lawful possession "the keys of death 
and of Hades" (1:18). 

2-3 St. John brings together the various descriptions of the 
evil one that he has used throughout the prophecy: the Dragon 
(12:3-4,7,9,13, 16-17; 13:2,4, 11; 16:13), the Serpent of old (9:19; 
12:9, 14-15), the devil (2:10;12:9, 12), Satan (2:9, 13, 24; 3:9; 
12:9), the deceiver of the whole world (2:20; 12:9; 13:14; 18:23; 
19:20). But the terrifying power of this enemy only serves to dis- 
play the surpassing greatness of his Conqueror, who has so eas- 
ily rendered him impotent: Jesus Christ, in His mission as the 
"Angel from heaven," laid hold of the Dragon . . . and bound 

Crises (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1984); Julian L. Simon, The Ulti- 
mate Resource (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981); Julian L. Simon 
and Herman Kahn, eds., The Resourceful Earth: A Response to "Global 
2000" (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1984); William Tucker, Progress and Privilege: 
America in the Age of Environmentalism (Garden City, NY: Anchor Press/ 
Doubleday, 1982). The fact is that Christianity, by producing the science and 
technology of the West, has vastly increased the earth's resources. 

499 



20:2-3 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

him for a thousand years, and threw him into the Abyss, and 
shut it and sealed it over him. As St. John declared in his first 
epistle, Christ "appeared for this purpose, that He might destroy 
the works of the devil" (1 John 3:8). In terms of this purpose, 
the Lord began "binding the strong man" during His earthly 
ministry; having successfully completed His mission, He is now 
plundering Satan's house and carrying off his property: 

If I cast out demons by the Spirit of God, then the Kingdom 
of God has come upon you. Or how can anyone enter the strong 
man's house and carry off his property, unless he first binds the 
strong man? And then he will plunder his house. (Matt. 
12:28-29; cf. Luke 11:20-22) 

Herman Ridderbos comments on the significance of this 
statement, and goes on to provide an excellent summary of the 
Gospel accounts of Christ's victory over the devil: "This passage 
[Matt. 12:28; Luke 11:20] is not an isolated one. The whole 
struggle of Jesus against the devils is determined by the anti- 
thesis between the kingdom of heaven and the rule of Satan, 
and time and again Jesus' superior power over Satan and Satan's 
dominion proves the break-through on the part of the kingdom 
of God. This is already proved at the start by the temptation in 
the wilderness. There can be no doubt that in it the issue is Jesus' 
messianic kingship. Three times in succession it is Satan's point 
of departure, referring back to the divine words about Jesus at 
his baptism (Matt. 3:17; Mark 1:11; Luke 3:22; Matt. 4:3, 6; 
Luke 4:3, 9). Especially the temptation with respect to 'all the 
kingdoms of the world' (Matt. 4:8ff.; Luke 4:5ff.) shows what is 
at issue in the struggle between Jesus and Satan. Here Satan ap- 
pears as 'the prince of the world' (cf. John 12:31;14:30; 16:11), 
who opposes God's kingdom, and who knows that Jesus will 
dispute that power with him in the name of God. Here, then, 
together with the Messiahship, the kingdom of God is at issue. 
At the same time it appears that the victory over Satan to be 
gained by the kingdom of God is not only a matter of power, 
but first and foremost one of obedience on the part of the Mes- 
siah. The Messiah must not make an arbitrary use of the author- 
it y entrusted to him. He will have to acquire the power that 
Satan offers him only in the way ordained by God. That is why 

500 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:2-3 

Jesus' rejection of the temptation is already the beginning of his 
victory and of the coming of the kingdom, although this victory 
will have to be renewed again and again during his life on earth 
(cf. Luke 4:13; Matt. 16:23, and parallels; 26:38, and parallels; 
27:40-43, and parallels). From the beginning of his public activ- 
ity Jesus' power over Satan had already asserted itself. This is 
not only proved by the casting out of devils in itself, but also by 
the manner in which those possessed by the devil behave in his 
presence (cf. Mark 1:24; Luke 4:34; Mark 5:7; Matt. 8:29; Luke 
8:28, 31). When Jesus approaches they raise a cry, obviously in 
fear. They show that they have a supernatural knowledge of his 
person and of the significance of his coming (cf. Mark 1:34; 
3:11). They call him 'the Holy One of God,' 'the Son of God,' 
'Son of the most high God.' By this they recognize his messianic 
dignity (cf. Luke 4:41). They consider his coming as their own 
destruction (Mark 1:24; Luke 4:34); their torment (Matt. 8:29; 
Mark 5:7; Luke 8:28). They feel powerless and try only to 
lengthen their existence on earth (Matt. 8:29; Mark 5:10), and 
implore him not to send them into 'the deep,' that is to say, the 
place of their eternal woe (Luke 8:31, cf. Rev. 20:3ff.). All this 
shows that in Jesus' person and coming the kingdom has become 
a present reality. For the exercise of God's power over the devil 
and his rule has the coming of the kingdom for its foundation. 
"And finally we must refer in this context to Luke 10:18-19. 
Jesus has sent out the seventy (or seventy-two) who come back 
to him and joyfully tell him of the success of their mission. And 
then Jesus says: T beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.' 
Thus he accepts the joy of those he had sent out and shows them 
the background of their power over the devils. The general 
meaning of this is clear: Satan himself has fallen with great 
force from his position of power. This is what Jesus had seen 
with his own eyes. Satan's supporters cannot maintain them- 
selves. . . . The thing that counts in this connection is that what 
is said here is essentially the same thing as in Matthew 12:28 and 
Luke 11:20, i.e., the great moment of the breaking down of 
Satan's rule has come and at the same time that of the coming of 
the kingdom of heaven. The redemption is no longer future but 
has become present. In this struggle it is Jesus himself who has 
broken Satan's power and who continues to do so. Such appears 
from what follows when he discusses the power of the disciples 

501 



20:2-3 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

which they have received from him to tread on serpents and 
scorpions and over all the power of the enemy, so that, in the 
future also, nothing will be impossible to them. By this enemy 
Satan is again meant. Serpents and scorpions are mentioned 
here as his instruments (Ps. 91:13) by which he treacherously 
tries to ruin man. But any power Satan has at his disposal to 
bring death and destruction (cf., e.g., Heb. 2:14) has been sub- 
jected to the disciples. All this implies and confirms that the 
great moment of salvation, the fulfillment of the promise, the 
kingdom of heaven, has come." 11 

The whole message of the New Testament (cf. Eph. 4:8; Col. 
2:15; Heb. 2:14) stresses that Satan was definitively defeated in 
the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ. It is 
absolutely crucial to remember that in speaking of Christ's 
"Ascension" - His Coming to the Throne of the Ancient of Days 
(Dan. 7:13-14)— we are speaking not only of His single act of 
ascending into the Cloud, but also of the direct and immediate 
consequences of that act: the outpouring of the Spirit on the 
Church in a.d.30 (Luke 24:49-51; John 16:7; Acts 2:17-18, 33), 
and the outpouring of wrath upon Jerusalem and the Temple in 
a.d.70 (Dan. 9:24-27; Acts 2:19-20;. Pentecost and Holocaust 
were the Ascension applied. The final act in the drama of the de- 
finitive (as distinguished from the progressive and consum- 
mative) 12 binding of Satan was played out in the destruction of 
the Old Covenant system. This is why St. Paul, writing a few 
years before the event, could assure the Church that "the God of 
peace will soon crush Satan under your feet" (Rem. 16:20). 

For all these reasons, it is generally suggested by both post- 
millennial and amillennial authors that the binding of Satan, so 
that he should not deceive the nations any longer, refers to his 



11. Herman Ridderbos, The Coming of the Kingdom (St. Catherine, 
Ontario: Paideia Press, [1962] 1978), pp. 62ff. 

12. Satan is bound progressively as Christ's Kingdom grows throughout his- 
tory, extending its influence to transform every aspect of life (Matt. 5:13-16; 
13:31-33), and in the daily experience of Christians as we successfully resist the 
devil (James 4:7) and proclaim the Word of God (Rev. 12:11). Satan will be 
bound consummatively at the Last Day, when death itself is destroyed in the 
Resurrection (J ohn 6:39-40; 1 Cor. 15:22-26, 51-54). On the definitive-progressive- 
final pattern in general, see David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theol- 
ogy of Dominion (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 24f., 42, 73, 
136,146ff.,206, 209, 223. 

502 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:2-3 

inability to prevent the message of the Gospel from achieving 
success. And, as far as it goes, this interpretation certainly has 
Biblical warrant: Before the coming of Christ, Satan controlled 
the nations; 13 but now his death-grip has been shattered by the 
Gospel, as the good news of the Kingdom has spread through- 
out the world. The Lord Jesus sent the Apostle Paul to the Gen- 
tile nations "to open their eyes so that they may turn from dark- 
ness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God, in order 
that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance 
among those who have been sanctified by faith in Me" (Acts 
26:18). Christ came "to rule over the Gentiles" (Rem. 15:12). 
That Satan has been bound does not mean that all his activity 
has ceased. The New Testament tells us specifically that the dem- 
ons have been disarmed and bound (Col. 2:15; 2 Pet. 2:4; Jude 6) 
- yet they are still active. It is just that their activity is restricted. 
And, as the Gospel progresses throughout the world, their activ- 
ity will become even more limited. Satan is unable to prevent the 
victory of Christ's Kingdom. We will overcome (1 John 4:4). 
"Let it be known to you therefore, that this salvation of God has 
been sent to the Gentiles, and they will listen" (Acts 28:28). 

The great fathers and teachers of the Church have always 
recognized that Christ definitively defeated Satan in His First 
Coming. As St. Irenaeus said, "The Word of God, the Maker of 
all things, conquering him by means of human nature, and 
showing him to be an apostate, has put him under the power of 
man. For He says, 'Behold, I confer upon you the power of 
treading upon serpents and scorpions, and upon all the power 
of the enemy' [Luke 10:19], in order that, as he obtained power 



13. A good account of the pervasiveness of demonic activity and control 
throughout the ancient heathen world is contained in the first ten books of St. 
Augustine's City of God, but the fact is obvious even in the writings of the 
pagans themselves. Virtually every page of Herodotus' History or Virgil's 
Aeneid bears eloquent and explicit testimony of the tyranny the "gods" exer- 
cised over every aspect of pagan life and thought. Yet it all came to a halt with 
the Resurrection of Christ: The gods suddenly stopped talking, as the pagan 
writer Plutarch observed in his work On Why Oracles Came to Fail, and as St. 
Athanasius constantly remarks in his classic treatise On the Incarnation of the 
Word of God. Cf. trie wide-ranging discussion of the demise of the archaic 
worldview in Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend, Hamlet's Mill: 
An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time (Ipswich: Gambit, 1969), pp. 56-75, 
275-87, 340-43. 

503 



20:2-3 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

over man by apostasy, so again his apostasy might be deprived 
of power by means of man turning back again to God." 14 St. 
Augustine agreed: "The devil was conquered by his own trophy 
of victory. The devil jumped for joy, when he seduced the first 
man and cast him down to death. By seducing the first man, he 
slew him; by slaying the last man, he lost the first from his snare. 
The victory of our Lord Jesus Christ came when he rose, and 
ascended into heaven; then was fulfilled what you have heard 
when the Apocalypse was being read, 'The Lion of the tribe of 
Judah has won the day' [Rev. 5:5]. . . . The devil jumped for 
joy when Christ died; and by the very death of Christ the devil 
was overcome: he took, as it were, the bait in the mousetrap. He 
rejoiced at the death, thinking himself death's commander. But 
that which caused his joy dangled the bait before him. The 
Lord's cross was the devil's mousetrap: the bait which caught 
him was the death of the Lord." 15 

But the precise thrust of Revelation 20 seems to be dealing 
with something much more specific than a general binding and 
defeat of Satan. St. John tells us that the Dragon is bound with 
reference to his ability to deceive the nations — in particular, as 
we learn from verse 8, the Dragon's power "to deceive the na- 
tions . . . to gather them together for the war." The stated goal 
of the Dragon's deception is to entice the nations to join forces 
against Christ for the final, all-out war at the end of history. 
Satan's desire from the beginning has often been to provoke a 
premature eschatological cataclysm, to bring on the end of the 
world and the Final Judgment now. He wants to rush God into 
judgment in order to destroy Him, or at least to short-circuit 
His program and destroy the wheat with the chaff (cf. Matt. 
13:24-30). In a sense, he can be considered as his own agent pro- 
vocateur, leading his troops headlong into an end-time rebellion 
that will call down God's judgment and prevent the full matura- 
tion of God's Kingdom. 

Writing of Jesus' parable of the leaven - "The Kingdom of 
heaven is like leaven, which a woman took, and hid in three 



14. St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, v.xxiv.4. 

75. St. Augustine, Sermons, 261; trans, by Henry Bettenson, ed., The Later 
Christian Fathers: A Selection From the Writings of the Fathers from St. Cyril 
of Jerusalem to St. Leo the Great (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970, 
1977), p. 222. 

504 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:2-3 

pecks of meal, until it was all leavened" (Matt. 13:33) - Gary 
North observes: "The kingdom of God is like leaven. Christian- 
it y is the yeast, and it has a leavening effect on pagan, satanic 
cultures around it. It permeates the whole of culture, causing it 
to rise. The bread which is produced by this leaven is the pre- 
ferred bread. In ancient times - indeed, right up until the advent 
of late-nineteenth century industrialism and modern agricul- 
tural methods - leavened bread was considered the staff of life, 
the symbol of God's sustaining hand. 'Give us this day our daily 
bread,' Christians have prayed for centuries, and they have 
eaten leavened bread at their tables. So did the ancient 
Hebrews. The kingdom of God is the force that produces the 
fine quality bread which all men seek. The symbolism should be 
obvious: Christianity makes life a joy for godly men. It provides 
men with the very best. 

"Leaven takes time to produce its product. It takes time for 
the leaven-laden dough to rise. Leaven is a symbol of historical 
continuity, just as unleavened bread was Israel's symbol of his- 
torical discontinuity. Men can wait for the yeast to do its work. 
God gives man time for the working of His spiritual leaven. 
Men may not understand exactly how the leaven works - how 
the spiritual power of God's kingdom spreads throughout their 
culture and makes it rise — but they can see and taste its effects. 
If we really push the analogy (pound it, even), we can point to 
the fact that dough is pounded down several times by the baker 
before the final baking, almost as God, through the agents of 
Satan in the world, pounds His kingdom in history. Neverthe- 
less, the yeast does its marvelous work, just so long as the fires 
of the oven are not lit prematurely. If the full heat of the oven is 
applied to the dough before the yeast has done its work, both 
the yeast and the dough perish in the flames. God waits to apply 
the final heat (2 Pet. 3:9-10). First, His yeast - His church - 
must do its work, in time and on earth. The kingdom of God 
(which includes the institutional church, but is broader than the 
institutional church) must rise, having 'uncorrupted' the satanic 
dough of the kingdom of Satan with the gospel of life, including 
the life-giving reconstruction of all the institutions of culture. 

"What a marvelous description of God's kingdom! Chris- 
tians work inside the cultural material available in any given cul- 
ture, seeking to refine it, permeate it, and make it into some- 

505 



20:2-3 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

thing fine. They know they will be successful, just as yeast is 
eventually successful in the dough, if it is given sufficient time to 
do its work. This is what God implicitly promises us in the anal- 
ogy of the leaven: enough time to accomplish our individual and 
collective assignments. He tells us that His kingdom will pro- 
duce the desirable bread of life. It will take time. It may take 
several poundings, as God, through the hostility of the world, 
kneads the yeast- filled dough of men's cultures. But the end re- 
sult is guaranteed. God does not intend to burn His bread to a 
useless crisp by prematurely placing it in the oven. He is abetter 
baker than that." u 

As Tertullian stated in his masterful defense of the Christian 
faith: "We are a body united by a common religious profession, 
by a godly discipline, by a bond of hope. We meet together as an 
assembly and congregation that as an organized force we may 
assail God with our prayers. Such violence is acceptable to God. 
We pray also for emperors, for their ministers and those in au- 
thority, for man's temporal welfare, for the peace of the world, 
for the delay of the end of all things. ' ' " 

The specific point of the binding of the Dragon, therefore, is 
to prevent him from inciting the eschatological "war to end 
all wars," the final battle - until God is ready. When God's 
Kingdom-City is fully matured, then He will once more release 
Satan and allow him to deceive the nations for the final confla- 
gration. But the fire will fall according to God's schedule, not 
the Dragon's. At every point, God is controlling events for His 
own glory. 

Satan is to remain bound, St. John tells us, for a thousand 
years - a large, rounded-off number. We have seen that, as the 
number seven connotes a fullness of quality in Biblical imagery, 
the number ten contains the idea of a fullness of quantity; in 
other words, it stands for manyness. A thousand multiplies and 
intensifies this (10 x lOx 10), in order to express great vastness 



16. Gary North, Moses and Pharaoh: Dominion Religion Versus Power 
Religion (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1985), pp. 169f. 

17. Tertullian, Apology, 39; trans, by Henry Bettenson, The Early Christian 
Fathers: A Selection from the Writings of the Fathers from St. Clement of 
Rome to St.Athanasius (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1956, 1969), p. 141. 
Italics added. 

506 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:2-3 

(cf. 5:11; 7:4-8; 9:16; 11:3, 13; 12:6; 14:1,3, 20).' 8 Thus, God claims 
to own "the cattle on a thousand hills" (Ps. 50:10). This of course 
does not mean that the cattle on the 1,001st hill belongs to someone 
else. God owns all the cattle on all the hills. But He says "a thou- 
sand" to indicate that there are many hills, and much cattle (cf. 
Deut. 1:11; 7:9; Ps. 68:17; 84:10; 90:4). Similarly, the thousand 
years of Revelation 20 represent a vast, undefined period of time 
(although its limited, provisional nature as a pre-consummation 
era is underlined by the fact that the phrase is mentioned only six 
times in this chapter). It has already lasted almost 2,000 years, 
and will probably go on for many more. Milton Terry observes: 
"The thousand years is to be understood as a symbolical num- 
ber, denoting a long period. It is a round number, but stands for 
an indefinite period, an eon whose duration it would be a folly 
to attempt to compute. Its beginning dates from the great catas- 
trophe of this book, the fall of the mystic Babylon. It is the eon 
which opens with the going forth of the great Conqueror of 
19:11-16, and continues until he shall have put all his enemies 
under his feet (1 Cor. 15:25). It is the same period as that re- 
quired for the stone of Daniel's prophecy (Dan. 2:35) to fill the 
earth, and the mustard seed of Jesus' prophecy to consummate 
its world-wide growth (Matt. 13:31-32). How long the King of 
kings will continue His battle against evil and defer the last de- 
cisive blow, when Satan shall be 'loosed for a little time,' no man 
can even approximately judge. It may require a million years ." 19 
The binding of the Dragon prevents him from deceiving the 
nations any longer, until the thousand years are completed; 
after these things he must be released for a short time, in which 
he again goes forth to deceive the nations. The story of the 
Dragon will be picked up again in verse 7, and so here we need 
notice only St. John's use of the word must (literally, it is neces- 
sary; cf. 1:1; 4:1; 10:11; 11:5; 13:10; 17:10; 22:6). At every point, 
Satan's activity takes place under the strict government of the 
Providence of God. As Swete observes, "it is in vain to speculate 
on the grounds of this necessity" (upon which he immediately 



18. An analogy of this Scriptural usage is the way we, with a more inflation- 
ary mentality, use the term million: "I've told you a million times!" (1 suspect 
that even "literalists" talk that way on occasion.) 

19. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic: A Study of the Most Notable Reve- 
lations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton 
and Mains, 1898), p. 451. 

507 



20:4 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

goes on to speculate!); 20 it is enough that God has decreed its 
necessity. The Dragon is not his own master. He has been seized 
and bound and shut up in the Abyss, and someday he will be re- 
leased for a brief time - but all this takes place according to 
God's good and holy purposes. All the Dragon's hatred and rage 
against Christ's Kingdom are utterly impotent and ineffectual; 
he is powerless to do anything until he is deliberately released by 
the One who holds the key to the Abyss. 

The First Resurrection (20:4-6) 

4 And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment 
was given to them. And I saw the souls of those who had 
been beheaded because of the testimony of Jesus and be- 
cause of the Word of God, and those who had not wor- 
shiped the Beast or his Image, and had not received his mark 
upon their forehead and upon their hand; and they lived and 
reigned with Christ for a thousand years. 

5 (The rest of the dead did not live until the thousand years 
were completed.) This is the First Resurrection. 

6 Blessed and holy is the one who has a part in the First Resur- 
rection; over these the Second Death has no power, but they 
will be priests of God and of Christ and will reign with 
Christ for a thousand years. 

4 The new vision is of the thousand-year Kingdom: And I 
saw thrones, and they sat on them. We are not explicitly told 
who "they" are, but there should be no doubt about their iden- 
tity, for they are enthroned. St. John uses the word thrones 
(plural) only with reference to the twenty-four elders: 

And around the Throne were twenty-four thrones; and upon 
the thrones twenty-four elders sitting, clothed in white garments, 
and golden crowns on their heads. (4:4) 

And the twenty-four elders, who sit on their thrones before 
God, fell on their faces and worshiped God. (11:16) 

As we have seen, St. John's twenty-four elders are the repre- 
sentative assembly of the Church, the Royal Priesthood. 
Throughout the prophecy God's people are seen reigning as 



20. Henry Barclay Swete, Commentary on Revelation (Grand Rapids: 
Kregel Publications, [1911] 1977), p. 261. 

508 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:4 

priests with Christ (1:6; 5: 10), wearing crowns (2:10; 3:11), pos- 
sessing kingly authority over the nations (2:26-27), seated with 
Christ on His Throne (3:21). These things are all symbolized in 
the picture of the heavenly presbytery (4:4): As kings, the elders 
sit on thrones; as priests, they are twenty-four in number (cf. 
1 Chron. 24), and they wear crowns (cf. Ex. 28:36-41). 

The relationship between the priesthood of the elders and 
that of the Church at large has been well summarized by T. F. 
Torrance in his excellent study of the Royal Priesthood: "In the 
Old Testament Church there was a twofold priesthood, the 
priesthood of the whole body through initiation by circumcision 
into the royal priesthood, although that priesthood actually 
functioned through the first-born. Within that royal priesthood 
there was given to Israel an institutional priesthood in the tribe 
of Levi, and within that tribe, the house of Aaron. The purpose 
of the institutional priesthood was to serve the royal priesthood, 
and the purpose of the royal priesthood, that is of Israel as a 
kingdom of priests, was to serve God's saving purpose for all 
nations. So with the Christian Church. The real priesthood is 
that of the whole Body, but within that Body there takes place a 
membering of the corporate priesthood, for the edification of 
the whole Body, to serve the whole Body, in order that the whole 
Body as Christ's own Body may fulfill His ministry of reconcili- 
ation by proclaiming the Gospel among the nations. Within the 
corporate priesthood of the whole Body, then, there is a particu- 
lar priesthood set apart to minister to the edification of the Body 
until the Body reaches the fulness of Christ (Eph.4:13). . . . This 
ministry is as essential to the Church as Bible and sacramental 
ordinances, but like them, this order of the ministry will pass 
away at theparousia, when the real priesthood of the one Body, as 
distinct from the institutional priesthood, will be fully revealed." 21 

We therefore are not forced to choose whether those who are 
enthroned in the Millennium are elders or the Church, because 
both are true. In St. John's vision, he sees the elders on thrones 
- but they represent the whole Church. 22 Related to this is the 



21. T. F. Torrance, Royal Priesthood (Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd Ltd., 
1955), p. 81. 

22. It might be asked: Why didn't St. John simply say that those whom he 
saw on thrones were the twenty-four elders? There are at least two reasons — 
first, the various clues in the text (the mention of thrones, judgment, and a 

509 



20:4 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

promise Jesus made to His disciples: "Truly I say to you, that 
you who have followed Me, in the Regeneration when the Son 
of Man will sit on His glorious Throne, you also shall sit upon 
twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel" (Matt. 19:28; 
cf. Luke 22:30, where the term kingdom is used instead of re- 
generation). By His death, resurrection, and ascension to His 
glorious Throne (Eph. 1:20-22), Jesus inaugurated the Kingdom 
Age (Col. 1:13) - the Regeneration - in which all nations are be- 
ing brought to feast at His Table with the patriarchs and apos- 
tles (Isa. 52:15; Luke 13:28-29; 22:29-30). In this age, the 
apostles reign over the New Israel; they are the very foundation 
of the Church (Eph. 2:20), which itself is a nation of kingly 
priests (1 Pet. 2:9). 

Jesus gave His disciples two promises regarding the Messianic 
era: that they would sit on thrones, and that they would judge. 
This is precisely what St. John shows us in this text. He tells of 
those who sit on the thrones of the Kingdom, and adds that 
judgment was given to them, paralleling his statement in 11:18 
that the saints are "judged" or "vindicated"; further, however, 
there is the sense here that the privilege of judging (ruling) is 
given into the hands of the saints. Before Christ's victory over 
Satan, the Church was judged and ruled over by the heathen na- 
tions, because Adam had abdicated his position of judgment 
and surrendered it to the Dragon. But now the Son of Man, the 
Second Adam, has ascended to the Throne as ruler of the kings 
of the earth, and His people have ascended to rule with Him 
(Eph. 2:6). Definitively - and increasingly as the age progresses 
-judgment is given to God's people. 23 The Dominion Mandate 
of Genesis 1:26-28 (cf. Ps. 8; Heb. 2) will be fulfilled through the 
triumph of the Gospel; as the Gospel progresses, so does the 
dominion of the saints. The two go together. In His Great Com- 
mission (Matt. 28:18-20), Jesus commanded us to teach and dis- 

priesthood reigning with Christ) make an explicit identification unnecessary; 
second, in keeping with the symbolism of the Church as the New Israel, St. 
John uses the term eider twelve times (4:4, 10; 5:5,6, 7, 11, 14; 7:11, 13; 11:16; 
14:3; 19:4). At this point in the Book of Revelation, he has already used up his 
"quota"! 

23. See two essays by Gary North: "Witnesses and Judges," Biblical 
Economics Today,Vo\. VI, No. 5 (Aug. /Sept. 1983); "Christ's Mind and Eco- 
nomic Reconstruction," Biblical Economics Today,Vo\. VII, No. 1 (Dee./Jan. 
1984). These are available for a donation to the Institute for Christian Eco- 
nomics, P.O.Box 8000, Tyler, TX 75711. 

510 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:4 

ciple the nations, and as the earth is gradually discipled to the 
commands of God's Word, the boundaries of the Kingdom will 
expand. Eventually, through evangelism, the reign of Christians 
will become so extensive that "the earth will be full of the knowl- 
edge of God, as the waters cover the sea" (Isa. 11:9). Edenic bless- 
ings will abound across the world as God's law is increasingly 
obeyed by the converted nations (Lev. 26:3-13; Deut. 28:1-14). 24 

It must be stressed, however, that the road to Christian do- 
minion does not lie primarily through political action. While the 
political sphere, like every other aspect of life, is a valid and nec- 
essary area for Christian activity and eventual dominance, we 
must shun the perennial temptation to grasp for political power. 
Dominion in civil government cannot be obtained before we 
have attained maturity in wisdom -the result of generations of 
Christian ^(/"-government. As we learn to apply God's Word to 
practical situations in our personal lives, our homes, our 
schools, and our businesses; as Christian churches exercise Bib- 
lical judgment over their own officers and members, respecting 
and enforcing the discipline of other churches; then Christians 
will be able to be trusted with greater responsibilities. Those 
who are faithful in a few things will be put in charge of many 
things (Matt. 25:21, 23), but 'from everyone who has been given 
much shall much be required" (Luke 12:48; cf. Luke 16:10-12; 
19:17). One of the distinguishing marks of heretical movements 
throughout Church history has been the attempt to grab the 
robe of political power before it has been bestowed. 

This whole issue has been thoughtfully explored in an excel- 
lent essay by J ames J ordan, and the best service I can provide 
the interested reader at this point is simply to refer him to it. 25 
J ordan concludes his study with these words: "When we are 
ready, God will give the robe to us. That He has not done so 
proves that we are not ready. Asserting our readiness will not 



24. Iain Murray has shown in The Puritan Hope: Studies in Revival and the 
Interpretation of Prophecy (London: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1971) how 
this view of worldwide conversion has provided a basic inspiration for mis- 
sionary activity throughout the history of the Church, particularly since the 
Protestant Reformation. 

25. James B. Jordan, "Rebellion, Tyranny, and Dominion in the Book of 
Genesis," in Gary North, ed., Tactics of Christian Resistance, Christianity and 
Civilization No. 3 (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1983), pp. 38-80. 

511 



20:4 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

fool Him. Let us pray that He does not crush us by giving us 
such authority before we are ready for it. Let us plan for our 
great-grandchildren to be ready for it. Let us go about our busi- 
ness, acquiring wisdom in family, church, state, and business, 
and avoiding confrontations with the powers that be. . . . For 
as sure as Christ is risen from the grave and is ascended to regal 
glory on high, so sure it is that His saints will inherit the kingdom 
and rule in His name, when the time is right." 26 When the time is 
right. 

St. John tells us that, in addition to the enthroned elders, he 
saw those whom the elders represent: First, the souls of those 
who had been beheaded because of the Testimony of Jesus and 
because of the Word of God. This expression is almost identical 
to his description of the martyrs underneath the altar: 

Isaw . . . the souls of those who had been slain because of 
the Word of God, and because of the Testimony they had main- 
tained. (6:9) 

There is a significant difference, however: the use of the 
word beheaded. While most commentators are surely correct in 
seeing this as a general reference to all the martyrs for the Faith 
(by whatever means they were slain), we should attempt to do 
justice to St. John's choice of this particular term. The Greek 
verb {pelekizo) is not used anywhere else in the Bible, but the act 
of beheading is mentioned, under as ynonym (apokephalizo),\n 
Matthew 14:10, Mark 6:16,27, and Luke 9:9. The subject of the 
beheading, of course, was John the Baptizer, the last of the Old 
Covenant prophets and the Forerunner of Jesus Christ. As the 
latter-day Elijah (Mai. 4:5; Matt. 11:14; 17:10-13; Luke 1:17), he 



26. Ibid., p. 74. In this connection, Jordan's remarks on the so-called "pa- 
triotic" tax-resistance movement are also worth repeating: "We must keep in 
mind that the pagan is primarily interested in power. This means that the main- 
tenance of force (the draft) and the seizure of money (excessive taxation) are 
of absolute primary interest to him. If we think these are the most important 
things, then we will make them the point of resistance (becoming 'tax patriots' 
or some such thing). To think this way is to think like pagans. For the Chris- 
tian, the primary things are righteousness (priestly guarding) and diligent work 
(kingly dominion). Generally speaking, the pagans don't care how righteous 
we are, or how hard we work, so long as they get their tax money. This is why 
the Bible everywhere teaches to go along with oppressive taxation, and no- 
where hints at the propriety of tax resistance" (p. 79). 

512 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:4 

summed up the message of all the preceding witnesses: "For all 
the prophets and the Law prophesied until John" (Matt. 11:13). 
It seems likely, therefore, that St. John is here drawing our at- 
tention to the fact that the Old Covenant witnesses, symbolized 
by John the Forerunner, are to be counted among the faithful 
martyrs who "live and reign with Christ." 

A question immediately arises: Did the Old Covenant faith- 
ful really bear the Testimony of Jesus? It is striking that St. John 
uncharacteristically emphasizes the name of Jesus, as if to high- 
light the specifically Christian standing of these "beheaded" wit- 
nesses. And the New Testament rings clear that, like John, all 
the Old Covenant witnesses were Forerunners of Jesus Christ, 
testifying of Him: 

And He said to them, "0 foolish men and slow of heart to 
believe in all that the prophets have spoken! Was it not necessary 
for the Christ to suffer these things and to enter into His glory?" 
And beginning with Moses and from all the prophets, He ex- 
plained to them the things concerning Himself in all the Scrip- 
tures. (Luke 24:25-27) 

Do not think that I will accuse you before the Father; the one 
who accuses you is Moses, in whom you have set your hope. For 
if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he wrote of 
Me. (J ohn 5:45-46) 

Of Him all the prophets bear witness that through His name 
everyone who believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins. (Acts 
10:43) 

Paul, a bondservant of J esus Christ, called as an apostle, set 
apart for the Gospel of God, which He promised beforehand 
through His prophets in the holy Scriptures concerning His 
Son. . . . (Rem. 1:1-3) 

But now apart from the Law the righteousness of God has 
been manifested, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, 
even the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ to all 
and on all those who believe. (Rem. 3:21-22) 

The ranks of those who reign with Christ are also filled by 
the New Covenant faithful, the overcomes of St. John's day 
who also bore the Testimony of Jesus: those who had not wor- 
shiped the Beast or his image, and had not received the mark 

513 



20:4 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

upon their forehead and upon their hand (cf. 1:2,9; 2:13; 
12:9-11, 17; 15:2; 19:10). All these lived and reigned with Christ 
for a thousand years. Man's life has always fallen short of a 
thousand years: Adam lived 930 years (Gen. 5:5), and Methu- 
selah, whose life was the longest recorded in the Bible, lived 
only 969 years before he died in the Great Flood (Gen. 5:27).27 
If his heirs had been faithful, David's kingdom should have en- 
dured "forever"- meaning that it should have lasted a thousand 
years, until the Coming of Christ (2 Sam. 7:8-29; 1 Chron. 
17:7-27; 2 Chron. 13:5; 21:7; Ps. 89:19-37; Isa. 9:7; 16:5; Jer. 
30:9; Ezek. 34:23-24; Hos. 3:5; Luke 1:32-33); but, again, man 
fell short. No one was able to bring in "the Millennium" - the 
Thousand-Year Kingdom- until the Son of God appeared as 
the Son of Man (the Second Adam) and Son of David. He ob- 
tained the Kingdom for all Kis people. 

Does this reign of the saints take place in heaven or on 
earth? The answer should be obvious: both! The saints' thrones 
are in heaven, with Christ (Eph.2:6); yet, with their Lord, they 
exercise rule and dominion on earth (cf. 2:26-27; 5:10; 11:15). 
Those who reign with Christ in His Kingdom are all those whom 
He has redeemed, the whole Communion of Saints, whether 
they are now living or dead (including Old Covenant believers). 
In His Ascension, Jesus Christ brought us all to the Throne. As 
the Te Deum exults: 

When Thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death 
Thou didst open the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers. 

The reign of the saints is thus analogous to their worship: 
The whole Church, in heaven and on earth, worships together 
before the Throne of God, "tabernacling" in heaven (7:15; 12:12; 
13:6). To ask whether or not the saints' worship is heavenly or 
earthly is to propose a false dilemma, for the Church is both 
heavenly and earthly. Similarly, the Church's sphere of rule in- 



27. Based on a strict chronology, this seems to be a reasonable conclu- 
sion, since Methuselah died in the Flood year (Methuselah was 187 when his 
son Lamech was born, 369 when his grandson Noah was born, and hence 969 
when the Flood came; see Gen. 5:25, 28; 7:6). More than a century before the 
Flood, God declared the entire human race (except for Noah) to be worthy of 
destruction (Gen. 6:1-8; 7:1); there is no apparent reason to exclude Methu- 
selah from this sweeping condemnation. 

514 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:5-6 

eludes the earth, but it is exercised from the Throne in heaven. 
Jesus said to Pilate, "My Kingdom is not from this world. If My 
Kingdom were from this world, then My servants would be 
fighting, that I might not be delivered up to the Jews; but as it is, 
My Kingdom is not from here" (John 18:36). The text does not 
say, as some foolishly teach, that Christ's Kingdom is irrelevant 
to the world; rather, it affirms that the Kingdom is not derived 
from earth: "He was speaking of the source of His authority, 
not the place of His legitimate reign. His kingdom is not of this 
world but it is in this world and over it."2 8 

5-6 The first part of verse 5 is a parenthetical statement 
about those who are excluded from the privilege of living and 
reigning with Christ. Now, if "those who had been beheaded" (v. 
4) are the Old Covenant faithful, the rest of the dead are the 
(primarily) Old Covenant unfaithful, the non-saints who were 
dead at the time St. John was writing. The figure can be logically 
extended to include all the unredeemed, of every age, but that is 
not the specific point St. John is making. Rather, he is stressing 
the fact that the dead believers of the Old Covenant have been 
included in Christ's Ascension and glorious reign from the heav- 
enly Throne; they live, while the wicked are dead. 

Ultimately, St. John tells us, there are two classes of people: 
1) The elders and those whom they represent (the faithful of the 
Old and New Covenants), who live and reign with Christ "for a 
thousand years" in His Kingdom; and 2) the rest of the dead, the 
unbelievers. These did not live until the thousand years were 
completed. While some interpreters have leaped to the conclu- 
sion that "the rest of the dead" will live after the Millennium has 
ended, there is no such implication here. St. John is concerned 
simply to tell us about the Millennium itself, and his phrase 
means nothing more than that the rest of the dead are excluded 
from life and dominion for the whole period. We all know, from 
such passages as John 5:28-29 and Acts 24:15, that there will be 
a general resurrection of both the just and the unjust; but we 
must remember that St. John is not writing a comprehensive 
Systematic Theology of the end of the world. He is writing a 



28. Gary North, Backward, Christian Soldiers? An Action Manual for Chris- 
tian Reconstruction (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), p. 4. 

515 



20:5-6 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Prophecy to the Church, dealing with certain aspects of the 
blessings of the righteous and the curses of the wicked. 

The narrative thus continues with St. John's definition of the 
saints' millennial living and reigning with Christ: This is the First 
Resurrection - first in both temporal order and importance. The 
imagery of two resurrections is solidly rooted in Scripture. In 
the Levitical system it was typologically set forth in the law pre- 
scribing purification after the defilement of death: 

The one who touches the corpse of any person shall be un- 
clean for seven days. That one shall purify himself from un- 
cleanness with the water on the third day and on the seventh day, 
and then he shall be clean; but if he does not purify himself on 
the third day and on the seventh day, he shall not be clean. 
(Num. 19:11-12) 

As James Jordan has shown, this cleansing ritual was a sym- 
bolic resurrection; The man who was defiled by contact with the 
dead was ceremonially dead, and had to be resurrected from 
death. 29 The resurrection was accomplished by the sprinkling of 
water (see Num. 19:13)30 on both the Third and Seventh days — in 
other words, a first and second resurrection. This "double resur- 
rection" pattern is repeated in different ways throughout the 
Bible. St. John's Gospel records Jesus' words on the subject: 

Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My Word, and be- 
lieves Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into 
judgment, but has passed out of death into life. Truly, truly, I 
say to you, an hour is coming and now is, when the dead shall 
hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who hear shall 
live. . . . 

Do not marvel at this; for an hour is coming in which all who 
are in the tombs shall hear His voice and shall come forth; those 
who did the good deeds to a resurrection of life, those who com- 
mitted evil deeds to a resurrection of judgment. (J ohn 5:24-25, 
28-29) 



29. J ames B.J ordan, The Law of the Covenant: An Exposition of Exodus 
21-23 (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984), pp. 56ff. 

30. On the significance of this passage for the mode of baptism, see Duane 
Edward Spencer, Holy Baptism: Word Keys Which Unlock the Covenant 
(Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1984), pp. 14ff. 

516 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:5-6 

Jesus here claims to be inaugurating the Age of the Resurrec- 
tion, in which those who believe in Him are now to be partici- 
pants; later, another "hour" will come in which all men, the just 
and the unjust, will rise out of the graves (cf. John 11:24-25). St. 
Paul drew the same distinction between two resurrections: 

But now Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits 
of those who are asleep. For since by a man came death, by a 
man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all 
die, so also in Christ all shall be made alive. But each in his own 
order: Christ the first fruits, after that those who are Christ's at 
His coming. (1 Cor. 15:20-23) 

There is thus to be a resurrection at the end of history, at the 
Second Coming of Christ on the Last Day (John 6:38-40,44, 54; 
Acts 24:15; 1 Thess. 4:14-17). But before that final resurrection 
there is another, a First Resurrection: the resurrection of "Christ 
the first fruits." He rose from the dead, and resurrected all be- 
lievers with Him. Note: St. John does not say that the believer 
himself as such is resurrected, but that he has a part in the First 
Resurrection. He is sharing in the Resurrection of Another - the 
Resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ. 31 St. Paul told the Colos- 
sian Christians how they had been made partakers in Christ's 
resurrection: 

Having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were 
also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God, 
who also raised Him from the dead. (Col. 2:12) 

Christ's resurrection is the definitive resurrection, the First 
Resurrection, which took place on the Third Day. We partici- 
pate in His resurrection through covenantal baptism, so that 
now we "walk in newness of life" (Rem. 6:4). When we were 
dead in our transgressions, God "made us alive together with 
Christ . . . and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him 
in the heavenly places, in Christ Jesus" (Eph. 2:5-6; cf. Col. 3:1). 
It is this definitive resurrection on the Third Day, in the middle 



31. See Philip Edgcumbe Hughes, "The First Resurrection: Another Inter- 
pretation; The Westminster Theological Journal, XXXIX (Spring 1977)2, pp. 
315-18. 

517 



20:5-6 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

of history, that both guarantees and is consummated by the 
"Seventh Day" resurrection at the end of history. Those who are 
baptized in Christ and thus united with Him in the likeness of 
His resurrection (Rem. 6:4-14) will be joined with Him in that 
final resurrection as well (Rem. 8:11). 

Yet, as Norman Shepherd has observed, St. J ohn in Revela- 
tion 20 "does not even describe the bodily resurrection of the 
just expressly as the second resurrection. This may well be indi- 
cative of the fact that contrary to much popular thought on the 
subject, baptism is even more properly resurrection than is the 
resurrection of the body. The just who are alive at the return of 
the Lord will not be resurrected in the body but will be trans- 
formed. The righteous dead who do rise bodily at the last day 
do not again assume mortality but immortality. Not resuscita- 
tion but t rans formation is the leading feature of resurrection, 
and the foundational transformation and transition takes place 
at baptism, the first resurrection." 32 

The First Resurrection is thus Spiritual and ethical, our re- 
generation in Christ and union with God, our re-creation in His 
image, our participation in His Resurrection. This interpreta- 
tion is confirmed by St. John's description of those in the First 
Resurrection - it completely corresponds with everything he 
tells us elsewhere about the elect: They are blessed (1:3; 14:13; 
16:15; 19:9; 22:7, 14) and holy, i.e. saints (5:8; 8:3-4; 11:18; 13:7, 
10; 14:12; 16:6; 17:6; 18:20, 24; 19:8; 20:9; 21:2, 10); as Christ 
promised all the faithful, the Second Death (v. 14) has no power 
over them (2: 11); and they are priests (1:6; 5:10) who reign with 
Christ (2:26-27; 3:21; 4:4; 11:15-16; 12:10). Indeed, St. John 
began his prophecy by telling his readers that all Christians are 
royal priests (1:6); and the consistent message of the New Testa- 
ment, as we have seen repeatedly, is that God's people are now 
seated with Christ, reigning in His Kingdom (Eph. 1:20-22; 2:6; 
Col. 1:13; 1 Pet. 2:9). The greatest error in dealing with the Mil- 
lennium of Revelation 20 is the failure to recognize that it 
speaks of present realities of the Christian life. The Bible is 
clear: Through baptism, we have been resurrected to eternal life 



32. Norman Shepherd, 'The Resurrections of Revelation 20," The West- 
minster Theological Journal, XXXVII (Fall, 1974) 1, pp. 37f. St. Gregory of 
Nyssa said: "It is necessary for us to undergo, by means of water, this 
preparatory rehearsal of the grace of the resurrection, so that we may realize 
that it is as easy for us to rise again from death as to be baptized with water." 
The Great Catechism, xxv. 

518 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:7-8 

and rule with Christ now, in this age. The First Resurrection is 
taking place now. Jesus Christ is reigning now (Acts 2:29-36; 
Rev. 1:5). And this means, of necessity, that the Millennium is 
taking place now as well. 

The Last Battle (20:7-10) 

7 And when the thousand years are completed, Satan will be 
released from his prison, 

8 and will come out to deceive the nations which are in the 
four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them 
together for the War; the number of them is like the sand of 
the sea. 

9 And they came up on the breadth of the earth and surrounded 
the camp of the saints and the beloved City, and fire came 
down from heaven and devoured them. 

10 And the devil who deceived them was thrown into the Lake 
of fire and brimstone, where the Beast and the False Prophet 
are; there they will be tormented day and night forever and 
ever. 

7-8 At last the thousand years are completed, and God's 
timetable is ready for the final defeat of the Dragon. According 
to God's sovereign purpose, the devil is released from his prison 
in order to deceive the nations. Biblical postmillennialism is not 
an absolute universalist; nor does it teach that at some future 
point in history absolutely everyone living will be converted. 
Ezekiel's prophecy of the River of Life suggests that some out- 
lying areas of the world - the "swamps" and "marshes" - will 
not be healed, but will be "given over to salt," remaining unre- 
newed by the living waters (Ezek. 47:11). To change the image: 
Although the Christian "wheat" will be dominant in world cul- 
ture, both the wheat and the tares will grow together until the 
harvest at the end of the world (Matt. 13:37-43). At that point, 
as the potential of both groups comes to maturity, as each side 
becomes fully self-conscious in its determination to obey or 
rebel, there will be a final conflict. The Dragon will be released 
for a short time, to deceive the nations in his last-ditch attempt 
to overthrow the Kingdom. 

We noted at verse 3 that the specific purpose of Satan's de- 
ception of the nations is to gather them together for the War. 
This had been at least one of Satan's goals from the beginning: 
to provoke the final war between God and His rebellious crea- 

519 



20:7-8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

tures, in order to "spike" God's work and prevent it from attain- 
ing fruition and maturity. That is why there was a sudden out- 
break of demonic activity when Christ began His earthly minis- 
try; that was Satan's motivation for tempting Him, for entering 
into Judas to betray Him, and for inspiring the Jewish and 
Roman authorities to slay Him. His plan backfired, of course 
(1 Cor. 2:6-8), and the Cross became his own destruction. 
Throughout the Book of Revelation St. J ohn has shown the 
devil frantically working to bring about the final battle, and in- 
variably being frustrated in his designs. Only after God's King- 
dom has realized its earthly potential, when the full thousand 
years have been completed, will Satan be released to foment the 
last rebellion - thus engendering his own final defeat and eternal 
destruction. 

In describing the eschatalogical war, St. John uses the vivid 
"apocalyptic" imagery of Ezekiel 38-39, which prophetically 
depicts the Maccabees' defeat of the Syrians in the second cen- 
tury b.c: The ungodly forces are called Gog and Magog. Ac- 
cording to some popular premillennial writers, this expression 
refers to Russia, and foretells a war between the Soviets and 
Israel during a future "Tribulation." Even apart from the fact 
that this interpretation is based on a radically inaccurate reading 
of Matthew 24 and the other "Great Tribulation" passages, 33 it is 
beset with numerous internal inconsistencies. First, premillen- 
nialistS tend to speak of this coming war with the Soviet Union 
as synonymous with the "Battle of Armageddon" (16:16). Yet, 
on premillennialist assumptions, the Battle of Armageddon 
takes place before the Millennium begins - more than 1,000 
years before St. John's "Gog and Magog" finally appear! Thus, 
premillennial prophecy buffs are treated to prolonged discus- 
sions of present Soviet military might and their supposed prepa- 
rations for assuming the role of "Gog and Magog." 34 At the 



33. This should be obvious by now; cf. Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 
77-102. 

34. It is certainly true that the Soviet Union's aggressive imperialism and its 
worldwide sponsorship of terrorism pose a grave danger to the Western nations; 
see Jean-Francois Revel, How Democracies Perish (Garden City: Doubleday 
and Co., 1984). This, however, has nothing to do with fulfilled prophecy, and 
everything to do with the fact that the West has simultaneously engaged in an 
increasing renunciation of Christian ethics and a progressive military and tech- 
nological outfitting of her enemies; on the latter, see Antony Sutton, Western 

520 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:7-8 

same time, there is virtually a complete neglect of what the Book 
of Revelation actually says about the war with Gog and Magog; 
apparently, the specific facts of Biblical revelation occasionally 
get in the way of "prophetic truth." 35 

Second, those who interpret the war of "Gog and Magog" as 
an end-time war involving the Soviet Union usually pride them- 
selves on being "literalists " Yet we should take note of what a 
strictly literal interpretation of Ezekiel 38-39 requires: 

1. Gog's reason for invading Israel is to plunder her silver 
and gold, and to take away her cattle (38:11-13); contrary to 
much premillennialist exposition, nothing is said about expro- 
priating Israel's oil or extracting minerals from the Dead Sea. 

2. All of Gog's soldiers are on horseback (38:15); there are 
no soldiers in trucks, jeeps, tanks, helicopters, or jets. 

3. All of Gog's soldiers are carrying swords, wooden shields, 
and helmets (38:4-5); their other weapons are wooden bows and 

Technology and Soviet Economic Development, 1917-67, three vols. (Stan- 
ford: Hoover Institution Press, 1968-73); idem, National Suicide (New 
Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1973); cf. Richard Pipes, Survival Is Not 
Enough: Soviet Realities and America 's Future (New York: Simon and Schus- 
ter, 1984). Those who are shocked that the possible future conquest of the 
United States by the Soviets might not be included in Bible prophecy would do 
well to consider the large number of important conflicts throughout the last 
thousand years of Western history that have also been omitted - such as the 
Norman Conquest, the Wars of the Roses, the Thirty Years' War, the English 
Civil War, the American Revolution, the French Revolution, the Napoleonic 
War, the Seminole War, the Revolutions of 1848, the Crimean War, the War be- 
tween the States, the Sioux Indian War, the Boer War, the Spanish-American 
War, the Mexican Revolution, the First World War, the Spanish Civil War, the 
Italo-Ethiopian War, the Second World War, the Korean War, and the Vietnam 
War, to name a few; many of which were viewed by contemporary apocalyp- 
tists as notable fulfillments of Biblical prophecy. 

35. The obvious example, of course, is Hal Lindsey, whose Late Great 
Planet Earth (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1970) spends 
about thirty pages (pp. 59-71, 154-68) detailing how the Soviet Union will soon 
fulfill the prophecy of "Gog and Magog" in the Battle of Armageddon, and 
takes only two or three sentences to deal with Rev. 20:8 - not once even men- 
tioning that the only reference to Gog and Magog in the entire Book of Reve- 
lation is in that verse. Cf. idem, There's a New World Coming: A Prophetic 
Odyssey (Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 1973), pp. 222-25, 278. Another exam- 
ple is the usually more circumspect Henry M. Morris, whose Revelation Rec- 
ord: A Scientific and Devotional Commentary on the Book of Revelation 
(Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, 1983) discusses Gog and Magog under 
Rev. 6:1 (pp. 108-110) and 16:12 (p. 310), but strives mightily to dismiss the sig- 
nificance of the reference in 20:8 (pp. 422f.). 

521 



20:7-8 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

arrows, clubs, and spears (39:3, 9). 

4. Instead of using firewood (apparently no one even consid- 
ers using gas, electricity y, or solar power), the victorious Israelites 
will bum Gog's wooden weapons for fuel for seven years (39:9-10). 

Third, the expression Gog and Magog does not, and never 
did, refer to Russia. That has been entirely made up from whole 
cloth, and simply repeated so many times that many have 
assumed it to be true. Ostensible reasons for this interpretation 
are based on a peculiar reading of Ezekiel 38:3, which speaks of 
"Gog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal." The word chief 
is, in the Hebrew, rosh; some have therefore translated the text 
as "Gog, the prince of Rosh." Rosh sounds something like 
Russia; therefore Gog is the prince (or premier) of Russia. Un- 
fortunately for this ingenious interpretation, rosh simply means 
head, and is used over 600 times in the Old Testament - never 
meaning "Russia." 36 

Those who hold that "Gog" (a name supposedly derived 
from Soviet Georgia, since they both start with a "G"!) is the 
Soviet Premier generally make the further claim that "Meshech" 
is really Moscow, 'Tubal" is Tobolsk, and "Gomer" (of Ezek. 
38:6) is Germany. In his very helpful examination of this issue, 37 
Ralph Woodrow comments: 'This is doubtful. 'Moscow' comes 
from the Moscovites and is a Finnish name. Moscow was first 
mentioned in ancient documents in 1147 a. d ., when it was a 
small village. Some think Tubal means Tobolsk, but this is only 
a similarity in sound. Tobolsk was founded in 1587 A.D. Some 
think Gomer [Ezek. 38:6] means Germany. It is true the words 
'Gomer' and 'Germany' both begin with a 'G.' So does guess- 
work." 38 

Woodrow goes on to give reasons why the war of "Gog and 
Magog" spoken of in Revelation cannot be identical to that 
prophesied in Ezekiel: 



36. Here is a complete list of its uses in Ezekiel alone: 1:22,25, 26; 5:1;6:13; 
7:18;8:3;9:10;10:1, 11; 11:21;13:18;16:12, 25, 31, 43; 17:4, 19, 22; 21:19,21; 
22:31; 23:15, 42; 24:23; 27:22, 30; 29:18; 32:27; 33:4; 38:2-3, 39:1; 40:1; 42:12; 
43:12; 44:18, 20. 

37. Ralph Woodrow, His Truth Is Marching On: Advanced Studies on 
Prophecy in the Light of History (Riverside, CA: Ralph Woodrow Evangelis- 
tic Association, 1977), pp. 32-46. 

38. Ibid., p. 41. 

522 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:7-8 

1. In Ezekiel, Gog is a prince. In Revelation, Cog is a na- 
tion. [But see Farrer's alternative explanation, below.] 

2. In Ezekiel, Gog is spoken of as coming against Israel with 
people from various countries around Israel; in Revelation, Gog 
and Magog are pictured as nations in the four quarters of the 
earth, in number as the sands of the sea. 

3. In Ezekiel, Gog and his troops come against Israel, a peo- 
ple who have returned from captivity and are dwelling without 
walls; in Revelation, Gog and Magog go up on the breadth of 
the earth and compass the city of the saints. 

4. In Ezekiel the enemy is Gog of the land of Magog; in Rev- 
elation Gog and Magog. 

5. In Ezekiel, Gog's troops are defeated in Israel and the 
people burn the remaining weapons for seven years; in Revela- 
tion, Gog and Magog are destroyed by fire from God out of 
heaven. . . . Wooden weapons would be destroyed then and 
there. 

It is not uncommon for the imagery of Revelation to be 
based on Old Testament subjects or places. The "Jezebel" of 
Revelation is not the same woman as in Kings. The "Sodom" in 
Revelation is not the same Sodom as in Genesis. The "Babylon" 
in Revelation is not the Babylon of Daniel. The "New 
J erusalenV'in Revelation cannot mean the old J erusalem. But, in 
each instance, the former serves as a type. The woman J ezebel 
had already died, the cities of Sodom and Babylon had already 
been overthrown, and (in our opinion) the battle of Ezekiel 38 
and 39 (if a literal battle) had already met its fulfillment within 
an Old Testament setting. 39 

As Caird points out, in Jewish writings "Gog and Magog" 
was a frequent, standard expression for the rebellious nations of 
Psalm 2, which gather together "against the Lord and against 
His Anointed."4° Austin Fairer comments: "St. J ohn takes the 
story from Ezekiel and leaves the symbol undecoded. St. J ohn 



39. Ibid., p. 42; cf. T. Boersma, Is the Bible a Jigsaw Puzzle? An Evalua- 
tion of Hal Lindsey' s Writings (St. Catherine, Ont: Paideia Press, 1978), pp. 
106-25; see also Cornells Vanderwaal's discussion of "Goggology" in Hal Lind- 
sey and Biblical Prophecy (St. Catherine, Ont.: Paideia Press, 1978), pp. 
78-80. 

40. G. B. Caird, A Commentary on the Revelation of St. John the Divine 
(New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1966), p. 256. Caird cites the following 
references in the Talmud: Ber. T, 10a, l3 a ;Shah. 118"; Pes. 118a; Meg.ha'San. 
17', 94', 9T;'AbodahZ. 3 ! ; 'Ed. H 10. 

523 



20:9-10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

says that the nations, or 'gentiles' beguiled by Satan are 'in the 
four corners of the earth' and perhaps he means this, i.e. that the 
unreconciled are tucked away in lands remote from the centre. 
The simple pairing of 'Gog and Magog' must not be taken as fix- 
ing on St. J ohn the error of understanding both names either as 
tribes or as princes. In Ezekiel it is perfectly clear that Gog is the 
prince, Magog the people. St. John is innocent of the mistake; he 
says simply 'the nations in the four corners of the earth, Gog and 
Magog,' i.e. the power so described by Ezekiel- as an English 
orator might have said 'the forces of frustrated nationalism, 
Hitler and Germany.' It is certainly curious that St. John equates 
without explanation the tribes in the four corners with a tribe in 
one corner; only he does exactly the same thing in the Armaged- 
don vision. Euphrates is dried to let the kings of the East pass; 
the three demons beguile all the kings of the earth to come to 
Armageddon. The old biblical picture of invasion from the North 
East is in both cases given an ecumenical interpretation." 41 

This is reinforced by St. J ohn's observation that the number 
of them is like the sand of the sea — the same hyperbolic image 
used for the Canaanite nations conquered by Joshua (Josh. 11:4) 
and the Midianites overthrown by Gideon (Jud. 7:12) - two of 
the greatest triumphs in the history of the Covenant people. 
Rather than being a reason for panic and flight, the surrounding 
of the saints by a rebellious horde "like the sand of the sea" is a 
signal that God's people are about to be victorious, completely 
and magnificently. God's reason for bringing a vast multitude to 
fight against the Church is not in order to destroy the Church, 
but in order to bring the Church a speedier victory. Instead of 
God's people having to seek out her enemies and engage them in 
combat one by one, God allows Satan to incite them into con- 
certed opposition, so that they may be finished off quickly, in 
one fell swoop. 

9-10 And they came up on the breadth of the earth: This is 
reminiscent of Isaiah's prophecy of a coming Assyrian invasion, 
which "will fill the breadth of your land" (Isa. 8:8); yet, as Isaiah 
goes onto say, the land belongs to Immanuel. If the people trust 



41. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), pp. 207f. 

524 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:9-10 

in Him, all the power of the enemy will be shattered. Faithful 
Israel can taunt her attackers: 



Be broken, O peoples, and be shattered; 
And give ear, all remote places of the earth. 
Gird yourselves, yet be shattered; 
Gird yourselves, yet be shattered. 
Devise a plan, but it will be thwarted; 
State a proposal, but it will not stand, 
For God is with us! (Isa. 8:9-10) 

Yet St. John's allusion to Isaiah's prophecy is also a reminder 
that old Israel is now apostate. For her there is no longer an Im- 
manuel. She has definitively rejected her Maker and Husband, 
and He has abandoned her. Instead, God is now with the 
Church, and it is the Church's opponents who will be shattered, 
though they be as many in number as the sands of the sea (Gen. 
32:12)! Jesus Christ is the Seed of Abraham, and He will possess 
the gate of His enemies, for the sake of His Church (Gal. 3:16, 
29; Gen. 22:17). 

St. J ohn's image for the gathered people of God combines 
Moses' camp of the saints with David and Solomon's beloved 
City. This City is the New Jerusalem, described in detail in 21:9- 
22:5, The significance of this should not be missed: The City ex- 
ists during the Millennium (i.e. the period between the First and 
Second Advents of Christ), which means that the "new heaven 
and new earth" (21 :1) are a present as well as future reality. The 
New Creation will exist in consummate form after the Final 
Judgment, but it exists, definitively and progressively, in the 
present age (2 Cor. 5:17). 

The apostates rebel, and Satan's forces briefly surround the 
Church; but there is not a moment of doubt about the outcome 
of the conflict. In fact, there is no real conflict at all, for the re- 
bellion is immediately crushed: Fire came down from heaven 
and devoured them, as it had the wicked citizens of Sodom and 
Gomorrah (Gen. 19:24-25), and the soldiers of Ahaziah who 
came against Elijah (2 Kings 1:10, 12). Is this to be a literal fire at 
the end of the world? That seems probable, although we must 
remember that St. J ohn is now showing us "a world of symbols 

525 



20:9-10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

too shadowy and distant even to be disputed." 42 Acknowledging 
that this firefall may refer to "that blow wherewith Christ in His 
coming is to strike those persecutors of the Church whom He 
shall then find alive upon earth," St. Augustine proposed 
another explanation: "In this place 'fire out of heaven' is well 
understood of the firmness of the saints [cf. 11:5], wherewith 
they refuse to yield obedience to those who rage against them. 
For the firmament is 'heaven,' by whose firmness these assailants 
shall be pained with blazing zeal, for they shall be impotent to 
draw away the saints to the party of Antichrist. This is the fire 
which shall devour them, and this is 'from God'; for it is by 
God's grace the saints become unconquerable, and so torment 
their enemies." 43 

In any case, the basic point of the text is that, in contrast to 
the armies of the Beast who were "killed" (i.e., converted) by the 
sword from the mouth of the Word of God (19:15, 21), these 
self-conscious rebels of the end are utterly destroyed. All oppo- 
sition to the Kingdom of God is completely eliminated. The 
Dragon never really had a chance - his release from the Abyss 
had been a trap from the very beginning, intended merely to 
draw his forces out into the open, to make them visible in order 
to destroy them. Terry comments: "It is a great symbolic pic- 
ture, and its one great teaching is clear beyond the possibility of 
doubt or misunderstanding, namely, that Satan and his forces 
must all ultimately perish. This is written for the comfort and 
confidence of the saints. But that final victory is in the far 
future, at the close of the Messianic age, and it is here simply 
outlined in apocalyptic symbols. Any presumption, therefore, 
of determining specific events of the future from this grand sym- 
bolism must be regarded as in the nature of the case a species of 
worthless and misleading speculation." 44 

Without descending into "misleading speculation," it is valid 
to ask: Why will the nations rebel after living in a Christianized 
world-order? In his thought-provoking study of "Common Grace, 
Eschatology, and Biblical Law," Gary North explains that both the 
regenerate culture and the unregenerate culture, as "wheat" and 



42. Fairer, p. 208. 

43. St. Augustine, The City of God, xx.12. 

44. Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic, p. 455. 

526 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:9-10 

"tares," develop historically toward greater consistency to their 
presuppositions - in Cornelius Van Til's phrase, "epistemologi- 
cal self-consciousness." Over time, as Christians conform them- 
selves more fully to God's commands and thereby receive His 
blessings, they become more powerful and attain increasing 
dominion. But what will happen to the unbelievers, as they be- 
come more self-conscious? North writes: "In the last days of this 
final era in human history [i.e., at the end of the Millennium], 
the satanists will still have the trappings of Christian order 
about them. Satan has to sit on God's lap, so to speak, in order 
to slap His face - or try to. Satan cannot be consistent to his 
own philosophy of autonomous order and still be a threat to 
God. An autonomous order leads to chaos and impotence. He 
knows that there is no neutral ground in philosophy. He knew 
Adam and Eve would die spiritually on the day that they ate the 
fruit. He is a good enough theologian to know that there is one 
God, and he and his host tremble at the thought (J ames 2:19). 
When demonic men take seriously his lies about the nature of 
reality, they become impotent, sliding off (or nearly off) God's 
lap. It is when satanists realize that Satan's official philosophy of 
chaos and antinomian lawlessness is a lie that they become dan- 
gerous. . . . They learn more of the truth, but they pervert it 
and try to use it against God's people. 

"Thus, the biblical meaning of epistemological self-con- 
sciousness is not that the satanist becomes consistent with 
Satan's official philosophy (chaos), but rather that Satan's host 
becomes consistent with what Satan really believes: that order, 
law, power are the product of God's hated order. They learn to 
use law and order to build an army of conquest. In short, they 
use common grace — knowledge of the truth - to pervert the 
truth and to attack God% people. They turn from a false knowl- 
edge offered to them by Satan, and they adopt a perverted form 
of truth to use in their rebellious plans. They mature, in other 
words. Or, as C. S. Lewis has put into the mouth of his fictitious 
character, the senior devil Screwtape, when materialists finally 
believe in Satan but not in God, then the war is over. Not quite; 
when they believe in God, know He is going to win, and never- 
theless strike out in fury - not blind fury, but fully self-con- 

527 



20:9-10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

scious fury — at the works of God, then the war is over. " 45 

North concludes: "Does the postmillennialist believe that 
there will be faith in general on the earth when Christ appears? 
Not if he understands the implications of the doctrine of com- 
mon grace. Does he expect the whole earth to be destroyed by 
the unbelieving rebels before Christ strikes them dead - doubly 
dead? No. The judgment comes before they can do their work. 
Common grace is extended to allow unbelievers to fill up their 
cup of wrath. They are vessels of wrath. Therefore, the fulfilling 
of the terms of the dominion covenant through common grace 
is the final step in the process of filling up these vessels of wrath. 
The vessels of grace, believers, will also be filled. Everything is 
full. Will God destroy His preliminary down payment on the 
New Heavens and the New Earth? Will God erase the sign that 
His word has been obeyed, that the dominion covenant has been 
fulfilled? Will Satan, that great destroyer, have the joy of seeing 
God's word thwarted, His handiwork torn down by Satan's very 
hordes? The amillennialist answers yes. The postmillennialist 
must den y it with all his strength. 

"There is continuity in life, despite discontinuities. The 
wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just. Satan would like to 
burn up God's field, but he knows he cannot. The tares and 
wheat grow to maturity, and then the reapers go out to harvest 
the wheat, cutting away the chaff and tossing chaff into the fire. 
. . . When [Satan] uses his gifts to become finally, totally 
destructive, he is cut down from above. This final culmination 
of common grace is Satan's crack of doom. 

"And the meek - meek before God, active toward His crea- 
tion - shall at last inherit the earth. A renewed earth and re- 
newed heaven is the final payment by God the Father to His Son 
and to those He has given to His Son. This is the postmillennial 
hope." 46 

So the devil who deceived them was thrown into the Lake of 
fire and brimstone, where the Beast and the False Prophet are; 
there they will be tormented day and night forever and ever. 



45. Gary North, "Common Grace, Eschatology, and Biblical Law," Appen- 
dix C, below, pp. 657f. 

46. Ibid., pp. 663f. 

528 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:11 

Satan's cause will be finally and thoroughly overthrown. To pic- 
ture this St. J ohn again uses imagery based on the holocaust of 
Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen. 19:24-25, 28) and the destruction 
of the rebels in the wilderness of Kadesh (Num. 16:31-33), based 
on Isaiah's similar usage to describe the utter ruin of Edom (Isa. 
34:9-10). He has already represented the eternal destruction of 
the Beast and the False Prophet and their followers by such im- 
agery (see 14:10-11; 19:20); now he shows that the prime insti- 
gator of the cosmic conspiracy is inevitably doomed to suffer the 
same fate. 

The Judgment of the Dead (20:11-15) 

1 1 And I saw a great white Throne and Him who sat upon it, 
from whose face earth and heaven fled away, and no place 
was found for them. 

12 And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before 
the Throne. And books were opened; and another book was 
opened, which is the Book of Life; and the dead were judged 
from the things which were written in the books, according 
to their works. 

13 And the Sea gave up the dead which were in it, and Death 
and Hades gave up the dead which were in them; and they 
were judged, each one according to his works. 

14 And Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This 
is the Second Death, the lake of fire. 

15 And if anyone was not found written in the Book of Life, he 
was thrown into the lake of fire. 

1 1 The sixth vision begins with the familiar formula: And I 
saw (kaieidon). History has ended; the crack of doom has 
fallen; and now the apostle's vision is filled with a great white 
Throne, and Him who sat upon it. Usually, it is implied in Reve- 
lation that the One seated on the Throne in heaven is the Father 
(cf. 4:2-3; 5:1, 7); but in this case St. John may have in mind the 
Son, since He is seated on a white Throne, and He has been seen 
previously seated on a white cloud (14:14) and a white horse (6:2; 
19:11). The Lord Jesus Christ is the great "Shepherd and Bishop" 
(1 Pet. 2:25); Farrer points out that "the idea of a 'white throne' 
may perhaps have been familiar to St. John's hearers as the dis- 
tinguishing character of the local bishop's chair in the church. 
The practice of spreading a white cover over it was certainly early; 

529 



20:11 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

whether so early as St. John's date, we cannot prove."4 7 

Prof. Berkhof summarizes the New Testament evidence re- 
garding the Judge at the Last Day: "Naturally, the final judg- 
ment, like all God's opera ad extra, is a work of the triune God, 
but Scripture ascribes it particularly to Christ. Christ in His 
mediatorial capacity will be the future Judge, Matt. 25:31-32; 
John 5:27; Acts 10:42; 17:31; Phil. 2:10; 2 Tim. 4:1. Such pas- 
sages as Matt. 28:18; John 5:27; Phil. 2:9-10 make it abundantly 
evident that the honor of judging the living and the dead was 
conferred on Christ as Mediator in reward for His atoning work 
and as part of HlS exaltation. This may be regarded as one of 
the crowning honors of His kingship. In His capacity as Judge, 
too, Christ is Saving His people to the uttermost: He completes 
their redemption, justifies them publicly, and removes the last 
consequences of sin." 48 

With this agree the great ecumenical creeds: 

The Apostles' Creed: 

[Jesus Christ] ascended into heaven, 

And sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; 

From thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead. 

The Nicene Creed: 

He ascended into heaven, 

And sitteth on the right hand of the Father; 

And He shall come again with glory to judge both the quick 

and the dead; 
Whose Kingdom shall have no end. 

The Te Deum Laudanum 

Thou sittest at the right hand of God in the glory of the Father. 

We believe that Thou shalt come to be our Judge. 

We therefore pray Thee, help Thy servants, whom Thou hast 

redeemed with Thy precious blood. 
Make them to be numbered with Thy Saints in glory everlasting. 
O Lord, save Thy people, and bless Thine heritage. 
Govern them, and lift them up forever. 



47. Farrer, p. 208. 

48. L. Berkhof, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans 
Publishing CO., 1939, 1941), pp. 731f. 

530 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:11 

The Athanasian Creed: 

He ascended into heaven; He sitteth on the right hand of the 
Father, God Almighty; from whence He shall come to judge the 
quick and the dead. 

At whose coming all men shall rise again with their bodies 
and shall give an account of their own works. 

And they that have done good shall go into life everlasting; 
and they that have done evil, into everlasting fire. 

This is the catholic faith; which except a man believe faith- * 
fully and firmly, he cannot be saved. 

I have emphasized this point because it has become popular 
in some otherwise apparently orthodox circles to adopt a heret- 
ical form of "preterism" that denies any future bodily Resurrec- 
tion or Judgment, asserting that all these are fulfilled in the Res- 
urrection of Christ, the regeneration of the Church, the coming 
of the New Covenant, and the destruction of Jerusalem in a.d. 

7 0. 4 9 Whatever else may be said about those who hold such no- 
tions, it is clear that they are not in conformity with any recog- 
nizable form of orthodox Christianity. The one, holy, catholic, 
and apostolic Church has always and everywhere insisted on the 
doctrine of the Last Judgment at the end of time. Its inclusion 
into all the historic definitions of the Faith is a universal testi- 
mony to its importance as an article of belief. 

St. John heightens our sense of awe at the terrible majesty of 

the Judge: From whose face earth and heaven fled away, and no 
place was found for them. The allusion is to Psalm 114, which 
shows us that it is in light of the Final Judgment that we can see 
the significance of its precursors in preliminary historic judg- 
ments: 



49. The most influential figure in this movement is Max R. King, a Church 
of Christ minister who has authored The Spirit of Prophecy (Warren, OH: 
Max R. King, 1971), a work that is both insightful and frustrating. King's her- 
meneutic is hampered by neoplatonic presuppositions (God wouldn't bother to 
resurrect a ph ysicalbody because He is interested only in "spiritual," i.e. incor- 
poreal, things) and by a "code" approach to Biblical symbolism. Cf. Jim 
McGuiggan and Max R. King, The McGuiggan-King Debate (Warren, OH: 
Parkman Road Church of Christ, n.d.). See also the similar views espoused by 
J. Stuart Russell, The Parousia: A Study of the New Testament Doctrine of 
Our Lord's Second Coming (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, [1887] 1983). 
James B. Jordan has responded to King and Russell in two taped lectures, 
available from Geneva Ministries, P. O. Box 131300, Tyler, TX 75713. 

531 



20:12 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

When Israel went forth from Egypt, 

The house of Jacob from a people of strange language, 

Judah became His sanctuary, 

Israel, His dominion. 

The sea looked and fled; 

The Jordan turned back. 

The mountains skipped like rams, 

The hills, like lambs. 

What ails you, sea, that you flee? 

Jordan, that you turn back? 

mountains, that you skip like rams? 

hills, like lambs? 

Tremble, O earth, before the Lord, 

Before the God of Jacob, 

Who turned the rock into a pool of water, 

The flint into a fountain of water. (Ps. 114) 

Earth and heaven flee from before His face, terrified at His 
approach; yet the people of the covenant need have no fear. For 
them, God's judgment is redemptive, not destructive. If the 
earth trembles, it is for our sake, so that God may give us the 
water of salvation. In fact, as we shall see, the judgment por- 
trayed in these verses is concerned with the wicked dead, those 
who come under the judgment of the Second Death. The elect, 
who reign with Christ, are not in view here. Rejoicing in the 
fruit of Christ's final victory, they do not come into judgment, 
but have passed out of death into life (John 5:24). 

12 Although we are still in the sixth vision, verse 12 contains 
the seventh kai eidon, And I saw - allowing the seventh vision 
to begin with the eighth kai eidon (see on 21 :1). We must remem- 
ber that St. John is not writing of the general judgment of all 
men, but of the fate of the wicked, called here the dead (cf . v. 
5). Hengstenberg comments: "The dead can only be the ungodly 
dead. It must alone appear singular, that here the dead are still 
spoken of, although they must have been raised up, before they 
could stand before the throne. If only the ungodly dead are 
meant, then there is nothing strange in the matter. For their life 
after the resurrection is but a life in semblance, as it was also be- 
fore in Hades. "5° 



50. E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John, two vols. (Cherry 
Hill, NJ: Mack Publishing Co., n.d.), Vol. 2, p. 3 10. 

532 



THE MILLENNIUM AND THE JUDGMENT 20:13 

St. John tells us he saw men of all classes and conditions, 
both the great and the small, standing before the Throne. And 
books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the 
Book of Life, the membership roll of the covenant, in which the 
names of the elect are inscribed (cf. 3:5; 13:8; 17:8). The func- 
tion of the Book of Life in this context is simply to reveal that 
the names of "the dead" do not appear therein. 

And the dead were judged from the things which were writ- 
ten in the books, according to their works. This can seem 
strange to modern evangelical ears; we are not used to reading 
such statements in Scripture, yet they actually exist in abun- 
dance (cf. Ps. 62:12; Prov. 24:12; Matt. 16:27; John 5:28-29; 
Rem. 2:6-13; 14:12; 1 Cor. 3:13; 2 Cor. 5:10; Eph. 6:8; Col. 3:25; 
Rev. 2:23; 22:12). The point of the text is not, of course, "salva- 
tion by works." The point is, instead, damnation by works. 

It is true that we are not saved by works (Eph. 2:8-9), but it 
is also true that we are not saved without works (Eph. 2:10; Phil. 
2:12-13). The Christian is "justified by faith alone" - but genuine 
justifying faith is never alone, as the Westminster Confession of 
Faith declares: "Faith, thus receiving and resting on Christ and 
His righteousness, is the alone instrument of justification; yet is 
it not alone in the person j ustified, but is ever accompanied with 
all other saving graces, and is no dead faith, but worketh by 
love" (xi.2). In a similar vein, John Murray wrote: "Faith alone 
justifies but a justified person with faith alone would be a mon- 
strosity which never exists in the kingdom of grace. Faith works 
itself out through love (cf. Gal. 5:6). And faith without works is 
dead (cf. James 2:17-20). It is living faith that justifies and living 
faith unites to Christ both in the virtue of his death and in the 
power of his resurrection." 51 

13 For this judgment the Sea gave up the dead which were in 

it — those who perished in the judgments of the Flood and the 
Red Sea symbolizing all the wicked, drowned in the "torrents of 
Belial" (Ps. 18:4); and Death and Hades, the "cords of Sheol" 
(Ps. 18:5) gave up the dead which were in them, God suddenly 
emptying "all supposable places where the dead could be 



51. John Murray, Redemption: Accomplished and Applied (Grand Rapids: 
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1955), p. 161. 

533 



20:14-15 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

found." 52 And they were judged, each one according to his 
works: Again St. John emphasizes that men's actions will come 
into judgment at the Last Day. 

14-15 St. Paul proclaimed that when Christ returns at the 
end of His mediatorial Kingdom, "the last enemy that will be 
abolished is Death" (1 Cor. 15:26). Thus, St. John saw Death 
and Hades, which were paired in 1:18 and 6:8, thrown into the 
lake of fire. As Terry says, "the entire picture of judgment and 
perdition is wrapped in mystic symbolism, and the one certain 
revelation is the final overthrow in remediless ruin of all who 
live and die as subjects of sin and death." 53 Further, as Morris 
observes, "death and Hades are ultimately as powerless as the 
other forces of evil. Finally there is no power but that of God. 
All else is completely impotent."5 4 

This is the Second Death, the lake of fire. And if anyone was 
not found written in the Book of Life, he was thrown into the 

lake of fire. Universalists have tried for centuries to evade the 
plain fact that Scripture slams the furnace lid shut over those 
who are finally impenitent, whose names are not inscribed (from 
the foundation of the world, 13:8;17:8)in the Lamb's Book of 
Life. Using a metaphor similar to St. John's, Jesus said: "If any- 
one does not abide in Me, he is thrown away as a branch, and 
dries up; and they gather them, and cast them into the fire, and 
they are burned" (John 15:6). "The rest of the dead" will never 
live, for there is no life outside of Jesus Christ. 



52. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptic, p. 457. 

53. Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics, p. 458. 

54. Leon Morris, The Revelation of St. John (Grand Rapids: William B. 
Eerdmans Publishing CO., 1969), pp. 241f. 

534 



21 
THE NEW JERUSALEM 

The Bible is a Storybook, with one Story to tell. That Story, 
which is of Jesus Christ and His salvation of the world, is pre- 
sented again and again throughout the Bible, with innumerable 
variations on the same basic theme. One important aspect of 
that Story is of God as the Warrior-King, who raises His people 
from death, defeats His enemies, takes for Himself the spoils of 
war, and builds His House. For example, there is the story of the 
Exodus: "Moses said to the people, 'Do not fear! Stand by and 

see the salvation of the Lord which He will accomplish for you 
today; for the Egyptians whom you have seen today, you will 
never see them again forever. The Lord will fight for you while 
you keep silent'" (Ex. 14:13-14). Accordingly, after the success- 
ful Red Sea crossing (the baptismal resurrection of Israel and 
the baptismal destruction of Egypt), Moses exulted: "The Lord 
is a Warrior!" (Ex. 15:3). Egypt and all its wealth and glory were 
completely wiped out; all that was left was what the Israelites 
had "plundered," of silver and gold, and articles of clothing (Ex. 
3:21-22; 11:1-2; 12:35-36). Much of this was later turned over to 
the Lord for the construction of the Tabernacle, God's House 
(Ex. 35:21-29; 36:3-8), which He entered in flaming Glory (Ex. 

40:34). 

The pattern is repeated many times, another well-known ex- 
ample being the Story of David and Solomon: David acts as God's 
Warrior, fighting the Lord's battles with Him (cf. 2 Sam. 5:22-25), 
and his son Solomon builds the Lord's House (2 Sam. 7:12-13); 
and again, the sign that God has moved in is the descent of fire 
(2Chron.7:l-3). All these were provisional victories and House- 
buildings, anticipations of the definitive Victory in the work of 
Jesus Christ. 

535 



PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

One of the most striking announcements of the coming Warrior- 
King occurs in the prophecy of Ezekiel. As we have seen, the 
Book of Revelation is self-consciously tied to Ezekiel at many 
points; and the last twelve chapters of Ezekiel are especially in 
the background of St. John's concluding chapters. In Ezekiel 37, 
the prophet sees a vision of Israel in exile, represented as a valley 
full of dry bones; humanly speaking, all hope is gone. But as 
Ezekiel preaches to the bones and intercedes for the people with 
the Spirit of God, the Lord performs the miracle of re-creation, 
raising up the people of Israel to life, bringing them out of their 
graves, and turning them into "an exceedingly great army." A 
united Israel is restored to her Kingdom, with David again rul- 
ing as King, forever. 

After this Resurrection, however, there is the War: "Gog of 
the land of Magog" comes with the armies of the heathen na- 
tions to make war against the restored Israel (Ezek. 38). He is 
destroyed by fire and brimstone from heaven, his spoils are 
taken by the victorious Israelites, and his armies are devoured 
by the birds of the air and the beasts of the field (Ezek. 39). Fol- 
lowing this scene, Ezekiel writes some of the most elaborately 
detailed chapters in the Bible (Ezek. 40-48), in which he 
describes an ideal Temple-City, a New Jerusalem in which God 
Himself dwells among His people and sends blessings out from 
His Throne to the ends of the earth. 

St. John has already used the resurrection-battle-Temple 
theme several times in Revelation (one of the most notable ex- 
amples is Chapter 11, in which the two witnesses are resurrected, 
the Kingdom comes, God's wrath falls upon the nations, the de- 
stroyers are destroyed, and the Temple is opened). But Ezekiel' s 
specific outline is clearly in mind in Revelation 20: The saints 
share in the First Resurrection and reign in the Kingdom with 
their greater "David"; then they are attacked by Gog and 
Magog. The enemy is destroyed by fire from heaven - the sign 
that God is entering His holy Temple. All this brings us up to 
21-22, St. John's vision of the final Temple, the consummate 
Paradise that has become the City of God, where God dwells 
with His people in perfect communion. Adam's original task has 
been accomplished, and its cultural implications are fully real- 
ized as the nations willingly bring their treasures into God's 
House and the River of Life flows out to heal the world. 

536 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21.1 

All Things New (21:1-8) 

1 And I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven 
and the first earth passed away, and there is no longer any 
Sea. 

2 And I saw the Holy City, New Jerusalem, coming down out 
of heaven from God, made ready as a Bride adorned for her 
Husband. 

3 And I heard a loud Voice from heaven, saying: Behold, the 
Tabernacle of God is among men, and He shall dwell among 
them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself shall 
be amcng them, 

4 and He shall wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there 
shall no longer be any death; there shall no longer be any 
mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed 
away. 

5 And He who sits on the throne said: Behold, I am making all 
things new. And He said: Write, for these words are faithful 
and true. 

6 And He said to me: It is done! I am the Alpha and the 
Omega, the Beginning and the End. I will give to the one 
who thirsts from the spring of the Water of Life without cost. 

7 He who overcomes shall inherit these things, and I will be 
his God and he shall be My son. 

8 But for the cowardly and unbelieving and sinners and abom- 
inable and murderers and fornicators and sorcerers and 
idolaters and all liars, their part will be in the lake that burns 
with fire and brimstone, which is the Second Death. 

1 St. John begins this, the last and lengthiest in the final ser- 
ies of visions, with the words And I saw. Although this is the 
seventh vision in the series, it is the eighth occurrence of the 
phrase kai eidon - the number 8, as we have already noted, be- 
ing associated with resurrection and regeneration (e.g., Hebrew 
males were circumcised on the eighth day; Jesus [888], was res- 
urrected on the eighth day, etc.). St. John uses it herein order to 
underscore the picture of cosmic resurrection and regeneration: 
He sees a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and 
the first earth passed away, having fled from the face of the 

Judge (20:11). The old world is completely replaced by the new; 

the word used is not neos (chronological newness) but kainos 
{newness in kind, of superior quality). Adam's task of heaveniz- 

537 



21:1 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ing the earth has been completed, established on an entirely new 
basis in the work of Christ. Earth's original uninhabitable con- 
dition of deep-and-darkness has been utterly done away with: 
There is no longer any Sea or Abyss. There is heaven and earth, 
but no "under-the-earth," the abode of Leviathan. What St. 
John reveals to us is the eschatological outcome of the compre- 
hensive, cosmic reconciliation celebrated by St. Paul: "For it 
was the Father's good pleasure for all the fulness to dwell in 
Him, and through Him to reconcile all things to Himself, hav- 
ing made peace through the blood of His cross; through Him, 
whether things on earth or things in heaven" (Col. 1: 19-20). 1 

Yet this vision of the new heaven and earth is not to be inter- 
preted as wholly future. As we shall see repeatedly throughout 
our study of this chapter, that which is to be absolutely and 
completely true in eternity is definitively and progressively true 
now. Our enjoyment of our eternal inheritance will be a contin- 
uation and perfection of what is true of the Church in this life. 
We are not simply to look forward to the blessings of Revelation 
21 in an eternity to come, but to enjoy them and rejoice in them 
and extend them here and now. St. John was telling the early 
Church of present realities, of blessings that existed already and 
would be on the increase as the Gospel went forth and renewed 
the earth. 

Salvation is consistently presented in the Bible as re- 
creation. 2 This is why creation language and symbolism are used 
in Scripture whenever God speaks of saving His people. We 
have seen how God's deliverances of His people in the Flood 
and the Exodus are regarded by the Biblical writers as provi- 
sional New Creations, pointing to the definitive New Creation in 
the First Advent of Christ. Thus, God spoke through Isaiah of 
the blessings of Christ's coming Kingdom: 

For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth; 

And the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind. 
But be glad and rejoice forever in what I create; 
For behold, I create Jerusalem for rejoicing, 



1 . See John Murray, "The Reconciliation," The Westminster Theological 
Journal, XXIX (1966) 1, pp. 1-23; Collected Writings, 4 vols. (Edinburgh: The 
Banner of Truth Trust, 1976-82), Vol. 4, pp. 92-112. 

2. See David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Dominion 
(Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 23-26. 

538 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:1 

And her people for gladness. 

I will also rejoice in Jerusalem, and be glad in My people; 

And there will no longer be heard in her 

The voice of weeping and the sound of crying. 

No longer will there be in it an infant who lives but a few days, 

Or an old man who does not live out his days; 

For the youth will die at the age of one hundred, 

And the one who does not reach the age of one hundred 

Shall be thought accursed. 

And they shall build houses and inhabit them; 

They shall also plant vineyards and eat their fruit. 

They shall not build, and another inhabit; 

They shall not plant, and another eat; 

For as the lifetime of a tree, so shall be the days of My people, 

And My chosen ones shall wear out the work of their hands. 

They shall not labor in vain, 

Or bear children for calamity; 

For they are the offspring of those blessed by the Lord, 

And their descendants with them. 

It will also come to pass 

That before they call, I will answer; 

And while they are still speaking, I will hear. 

The wolf and the lamb shall graze together, 

And the lion shall eat straw like the ox; 

And dust shall be the serpent's food. 

They shall do no evil or harm in all My Holy Mountain. 

(Isa. 65:17-25) 

This cannot be speaking of heaven, or of a time after the end 
of the world; for in this "new heaven and earth" there is still 
death (though at a very advanced age - "the lifetime of a tree"); 
people are building, planting, working, and having children. 
Isaiah is clearly making a statement about this age, before the 
end of the world, showing what future generations can expect as 
the Gospel permeates the world, restores the earth to Paradise, 
and brings to fruition the goals of the Kingdom. Isaiah is de- 
scribing the blessings of Deuteronomy 28 in their greatest 
earthly fulfillment. Thus, when St. John tells us that he saw "a 
new heaven and earth," we should recognize that the primary 
significance of that phrase is symbolic, and has to do with the 
blessings of salvation. 

Perhaps the definitive New Testament text on the "new 

539 



21:1 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

heaven and earth" is 2 Peter 3:1-14. There, St. Peter reminds his 
readers that Christ and all the apostles had warned of accelerat- 
ing apostasy toward the end of the "last days" (2 Pet. 3:2-4; cf. 
Jude 17-19) - which, as we have seen, was the forty-year transi- 
tional period (cf. Heb. 8:13) between Christ's Ascension and the 
destruction of the Old Covenant Temple, when the nations were 
beginning to flow toward the Mountain of the Lord (Isa. 2:2-4; 

Acts 2:16-17; Heb. 1:2; James 5:3; 1 Pet. 1:20; 1 John 2:18). As 
St. Peter made clear, these latter-day "mockers" would be Cove- 
nant apostates: Jews who were familiar with Old Testament his- 
tory and prophecy, but who had abandoned the Covenant by re- 
jecting Christ. Upon this evil and perverse generation would 
come the great "Day of Judgment" foretold in the prophets, a 
"destruction of ungodly men" like that suffered by the wicked of 
Noah's day (2 Pet. 3:5-7; cf. the same analogy drawn in Matt. 
24:37-39; Luke 17:26-27). Just as God had destroyed the 
"world" of that day by the Flood, so would He destroy the 
"world" of first-century Israel by fire in the fall of Jerusalem. 

St. Peter describes this as the destruction of "the present 
heavens and earth" (2 Pet. 3:7), making way for "new heavens 
and anew earth" (v. 13). Because of the "collapsing-universe" 
terminology used in this passage, many have mistakenly assumed 
that St. Peter is speaking of the final end of the physical heaven 
and earth, rather than the dissolution of the Old Covenant 
world order. The great seventeenth-century Puritan theologian 
John Owen answered this view by referring to the Bible's meta- 
phorical usage of heavens and earth, &S in Isaiah's description of 
the Mosaic Covenant: 

But I am the Lord thy God, that divided the sea, whose 
waves roared: The Lord of hosts is His name. 

And I have put my words in thy mouth, and I have covered 
thee in the shadow of mine hand, that I may plant the heavens, 
and lay the foundations of the earth, and say unto Zion, Thou 
art my people. (Isa. 51:15-16) 

Owen writes: "The time when the work here mentioned, of 
planting the heavens, and laying the foundation of the earth, 
was performed by God, was when he 'divided the sea' (v. 15), 
and gave the law (v. 16), and said to Zion, 'Thou art my 
people' - that is, when he took the children of Israel out of 

540 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:1 

Egypt, and formed them in the wilderness into a church and 
state. Then he planted the heavens, and laid the foundation of 
the earth - made the new world; that is, brought forth order, 
and government, and beauty, from the confusion wherein be- 
fore they were. This is the planting of the heavens, and laying 
the foundation of the earth in the world ."3 

Another such text, among many that could be mentioned, is 
Jeremiah 4:23-31, which speaks of the imminent fall of Jeru- 
salem (587 B.c. ) in similar language of recreation: "I looked on 
the earth, and behold, it was formless and void; and to the heav- 
ens, and they had no light. . . . For thus says the Lord, the 

whole land shall be a desolation [cf. Matt. 24:15], yet I will not 
execute a complete destruction. For this the earth shall mourn, 
and the heavens above be dark. . . ." God's Covenant with 
Israel had been expressed from the very beginning in terms of a 
new creation; thus the Old Covenant order, in which the entire 
world was organized around the central sanctuary of the Jeru- 
salem Temple, could quite appropriately be described, before its 
final dissolution, as "the present heavens and earth." 

Owen continues: "And hence it is, that when mention is 
made of the destruction of a state and government, it is in that 
language that seems to set forth the end of the world. So Isaiah 
34:4; which is yet but the destruction of the state of Edom. The 
like is also affirmed of the Roman empire, Revelation 6:14; 
which the Jews constantly affirm to be intended by Edom in the 
prophets. And in our Saviour Christ's prediction of the destruc- 
tion of Jerusalem, Matthew 24, he sets it out by expressions of 
the same importance. It is evident then, that, in the prophetical 
idiom and manner of speech, by 'heavens' and 'earth,' the civil 
and religious state and combination of men in the world, and 
the men of them, are often understood. So were the heavens and 
earth that world which was then destroyed by the flood. 

"On this foundation I affirm that the heavens and earth here 
intended in this prophecy of Peter, the coming of the Lord, the 
day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men, mentioned in 
the destruction of that heaven and earth, do all of them relate, 
not to the last and final judgment of the world, but to that utter 



3. John Owen, Works, 16 vols. (London: The Banner of Truth Trust, 
1965-68), Vol. 9, p. 134. 

541 



21:1 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

desolation and destruction that was to be made of the Judaical 
church and state ."4 

This interpretation is confirmed by St. Peter's further infor- 
mation: In this imminent "Day of the Lord" which is about to 
come upon the first-century world "like a thief (cf. Matt. 
24:42-43; 1 Thess. 5:2; Rev. 3:3), "the elements will be destroyed 
with intense heat" (v. 10; cf. v. 12). What are these elements? So- 
called "literalists" will have it that the apostle is speaking about 
physics, referring the term to atoms (or perhaps subatomic par- 
ticles), the actual physical components of the universe. What 
these "literalists" fail to recognize is that although the word ele- 
ments is used several times in the New Testament, it is never 
used in connection with the physical universe! The term is al- 
ways used in connection with the Old Covenant order (see Gal. 
4:3,9; Col.2:8, 20). The writer to the Hebrews chided them: 
"For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you have 
need again for someone to teach you the elements of the oracles 
of God, and you have come to need milk and not solid food" 
(Heb. 5:12). In context, the writer is clearly speaking of Old 
Covenant truths - particularly since he connects it with the term 
oracles of God, an expression generally used for the provisional, 
Old Covenant revelation (see Acts 7:38; Rem. 3:2). St. Peter's 
message, Owen argues, is that "the heavens and earth that God 
himself planted - the sun, moon, and stars of the Judaical polity 
and church — the whole old world of worship and worshipers, 
that stand out in their obstinacy against the Lord Christ - shall 
be sensibly dissolved and destroyed.'" Thus "the Land and its 
works will be burned up" (v. 10). 

Owen offers two further reasons ("of many that might be in- 
sisted on from the text") for adopting the a.d. 70 interpretation 

of 2 Peter 3. First, he observes, "whatever is here mentioned was 
to have its particular influence on the men of that generation." 
St. Peter is especially concerned that the first-century believers 
remember the apostolic warnings about "the last days" (v. 2-3); 
Jewish scoffers, clearly familiar with the Biblical prophecies of 
judgment, refuse to heed the warnings (v. 3-5); St. Peter's read- 
ers are exhorted to live holy lives in the light of this imminent 



4. Ibid. 

5. Ibid., p. 135. 



542 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:1 

judgment (v. 11, 14); and it is these early Christians who are re- 
peatedly mentioned as actively "looking for and hastening" the 
judgment (v. 12, 13, 14). It is precisely the nearness of the ap- 
proaching conflagration that St. Peter cites as a motive to dili- 
gence in godly living. 

Second, Owen cites 2 Peter 3:13: "But according to His 
promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in 
which righteousness dwells ." Owen asks: "What is that promise? 
Where may we find it? Why, we have it in the very words and 
letter, Isaiah 65:17. Now, when shall this be that God will create 
these 'new heavens and new earth, wherein dwelleth righteous- 
ness'? Saith Peter, 'It shall be after the coming of the Lord, after 
that judgment and destruction of ungodly men, who obey not the 
Gospel, that I foretell.' But now it is evident, from this place of 
Isaiah, with chapter 66:21-22, that this is a prophecy of Gospel 
times only; and that the planting of these new heavens is noth- 
ing but the creation of Gospel ordinances, to endure forever. 
The same thing is so expressed in Hebrews 12:26-28." 6 

Owen is right on target, asking the question that so many ex- 
positors fail to ask: Where had God promised to bring "new 
heavens and a new earth"? The answer, as Owen correctly 
states, is in Isaiah 65 and 66 - passages which clearly prophesy 
the period of the Gospel, brought in by the work of Christ. Ac- 
cording to Isaiah, this New Creation cannot be the eternal state, 
since it contains birth and death, building and planting 

(65:20-23). The "new heavens and earth" promised to the 
Church comprise the age of the Gospel's triumph, when all 
mankind will come to bow down before the Lord (66:22-23). St. 
Peter's encouragement to the Church of his day was to be 
patient, to wait for God's judgment to destroy those who are 
persecuting the faith and impeding its progress. Once the Lord 
comes to destroy the scaffolding of the Old Covenant structure, 
the New Covenant Temple will be left in its place, and the vic- 
torious march of the Church will be unstoppable. The world will 
be converted; the earth's treasures will be brought into the City 
of God, as the Paradise Mandate (Gen. 1:27-28; Matt. 28:18-20) 
is consummated (Rev. 21:24-27). 

This is why the apostles constantly affirmed that the age of 

6. Ibid., pp. 134f. 

543 



21:1 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

consummation had already been implemented by the resurrec- 
tion and ascension of Christ, who poured out the Holy Spirit. 
Once the old order had been swept away, St. Peter declared, the 
Age of Christ would be fully established, an era "in which right- 
eousness dwells" (2 Pet. 3:13). The distinguishing characteristic 
of the new age, in stark contrast to what preceded it, would be 
righteousness - increasing righteousness, as the Gospel would 
be set free in its mission to the nations. Norman Shepherd 
shows how this is foreshadowed in the provisional new creation 
after the Flood: "Just as Noah sets foot with his family after the 
first household baptism (1 Peter 3:20f.) on a new earth in which 
once again righteousness dwells, so also Christ by his baptism — 
his death and resurrection - introduces his children by their 
baptism into him, to a new existence in which they can begin to 
see and participate in a new earth characterized by righteousness 
and holiness. In the power of the Spirit they cultivate the earth 
for the glory of God."7 

It is certainly true that righteousness does not dwell in the 
earth in an absolute sense; nor will this world ever be absolutely 
righteous, until the final enemy is defeated at the Second Com- 
ing of Christ. The war between Christ and Satan for dominion 
over the earth is not over yet. There have been many battles 
throughout the history of the Church, and many battles lie 
ahead. But these must not blind us to the very real progress that 
the Gospel has made and continues to make in. the world. The 
war has been won definitively; the New World Order of the Lord 
Jesus Christ has arrived; and, according to God's promise, the 
saving knowledge of Him will yet fill the earth, as the waters 
cover the sea. 

Moreover, the phrase heaven and earth in these contexts 
does not, as Owen pointed out, refer to the physical heaven and 
the physical world, but to the world-order, the religious organi- 
zation of the world, the "House" or Temple God builds in which 
He is worshiped. The consistent message of the New Testament 
is that the House of the New Covenant, over which Jesus pre- 
sides as Apostle and High Priest, is infinitely superior to the 
House of the Old Covenant, presided over by Moses (cf. 1 Cor. 



7. Norman Shepherd, "The Resurrections of Revelation 20," The Westmin- 
ster Theological Journal, XXXVII (Fall 1974) 1, p. 40. 

544 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:2 

3:16; Eph. 2:11-22; 1 Tim. 3:15; Heb. 3:1-6). In fact, as the writer 
to the Hebrews insists, "the world to come" has come; it is the 
present salvation, brought in by the Son of God in the Last 
Days (Heb. 1:1-2:5). In this specific sense, righteousness does 
dwell in "heaven and earth." 

2 St. John next sees, as the central aspect of this New Crea- 
tion, the Holy City, New Jerusalem. Again we must remember 
that Jesus Christ has accomplished one salvation, one New Cre- 
ation, with definitive, progressive, and consummative aspects. 
The final reality of the eschatological New Creation is also the 
present reality of the definitive-progressive New Creation. No 
aspect of this salvation should be emphasized to the exclusion or 
undue minimization of the others. The New Testament teaches 
that, with Old Jerusalem about to be excommunicated and ex- 
ecuted for her violation of the covenant, Christians have 
become citizens and heirs of the New Jerusalem, the City whose 
origin is in heaven, which comes down out of heaven from God 
(3:12; cf. Gal. 4:22-31; Eph. 2:19; Phil. 3:20; Heb. 11:10, 16; 
12:22-23). The New Testament then goes onto say: All this, and 
heaven too! (cf. Phil. 3:21); the New Creation is not only a state 
established definitively by Christ, and progressively unfolding 
now; someday it will be established finally, in consummate, ab- 
solute perfection ! 8 

The City is made ready as a Bride adorned for her Husband. 
The Bride is not just in the City; the Bride is the City (cf. v. 
9-10). St. John's clear identification of the City as the Bride of 
Christ serves as another demonstration that the City of God is a 
present as well as future reality. The "Bride" of the weekly euch- 
aristic Wedding Feast (19:7-9) is the "beloved City" of the King- 
dom of Christ (cf. 20:9). We are in the New Jerusalem now, as 
the Bible categorically tells us: "You have come to Mount Zion 



8. Unfortunately, the almost exclusively futuristic interpretation of such 
passages in the recent past - and the accompanying neoplatonic outlook, as if 
to say that it is useless and even sinful to work for the "heavenization" of this 
world - has meant that a proper emphasis on the present reality of the King- 
dom appears to reverse the movement of the New Testament. Where the Bible 
says: "Not in this age only, but also in the age to come," our zeal to recover the 
Biblical perspective sometimes leads us to say: "Not in the age to come only, 
but also in this age." The danger in this, obviously, is that it can produce con- 
tempt for a truly Biblical eschatology. 

545 



21:3 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

and to the City of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and 
to myriads of angels in festal assembly, and to the Church of the 
firstborn who are enrolled in heaven. . .." (Heb. 12:22-23). 

3 If we are citizens of heaven, as St. Paul declared (Eph. 
2:19), it is also true that heaven dwells within us (Eph. 2:20-22). 
Indeed, the Word Himself has tabernacled among us (John 
1:14); He and His Father have made Their abode with us (John 
14:23); and thus we are the Temple of the Living God (2 Cor. 
6:16). Accordingly, St. John's vision of the Holy City is followed 
by a loud Voice from heaven, saying: Behold, the Tabernacle of 
God is among men, and He shall dwell among them, and they 
shall be His people, and God Himself shall be among them. 
Again, this is a repetition of what we have already learned in 
this prophecy (3:12; 7:15-17). In the New Testament Church the 
promise of the Law and the prophets is realized: "I will make 
My Tabernacle among you, and My soul will not reject you; I 
will also walk among you and be your God, and you shall be My 
people" (Lev. 26:11-12); "And I will make a Covenant of peace 
with them; it will be an everlasting Covenant with them. And I 
will establish them and multiply them, and will set My sanctuary 
in their midst forever. My dwelling place also will be with them; 
and I will be their God, and they will be My people. And the na- 
tions will know that I am the Lord who sanctifies Israel, when 
My sanctuary is in their midst forever" (Ezek. 37:26-28). 

As verse 9 makes explicit, this passage IS the conclusion of 
the Chalices-section of the prophecy. At itS beginning, St. John 
saw the Sanctuary of the Tabernacle filling with smoke, so that 
no one was able to enter it (15:5-8), and then he heard "a loud 
Voice" from the Sanctuary order the seven angels to pour out 
their Chalices of wrath into the Land (16:1). At the outpouring 
of the seventh Chalice "a loud Voice" again issued from the 
Sanctuary, saying: "It isdone!" - producing a great earthquake, 
in which the cities fell and every mountain and island "fled 
away" as the vision turned to focus on the destruction of Baby- 
lon, the False Bride (16:17-21). Now, toward the close of the 
Chalices-section, earth and heaven have "fled away" (20:11; 

21:1), and again St. John hears a loud Voice from heaven, an- 
nouncing that access to the Sanctuary has been provided to the 
greatest possible degree, for the Tabernacle of God is among 

546 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:4-5 

men. Soon, that same Voice will again announce: "It is done" (v. 
6), as the vision turns our attention to the establishment of the 
True Bride, New Jerusalem. 

4-5 The Voice St. John heard continues: And He shall wipe 
away every tear from their eyes; and there shall no longer be any 
death; there shall no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain. 
We can look forward to the absolute and perfect fulfillment of 
this promise at the Last Day, when the last enemy is destroyed. 
But, in principle, it is true already. Jesus said: "I am the Resur- 
rection and the Life; he who believes in Me shall live even if he 
dies, and everyone who lives and believes in Me shall never die" 
(John 11:25-26). God has wiped away our tears, for we are par- 
takers of His First Resurrection. One striking evidence of this is 
the obvious difference between Christian and pagan funerals: 
We grieve, but not as those who have no hope (1 Thess. 4:13). 
God has taken away the sting of death (1 Cor. 15:55-58). 

All these blessings have come because the first things have 
passed away. And He who sits on the Throne said: Behold, I am 
making all things new. Here is another connection to the teach- 
ing of St. Paul: "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, there is a New 
Creation; the old things have passed away; behold, all things 
have become new" (2 Cor. 5:17). Again, of course, we are con- 
fronted with the fact that this is true now, as well as on the Last 
Day. The only essential difference between the subjects of 2 Cor- 
inthians 5 and Revelation 21 is that St. Paul is speaking of the 
redeemed individual, while St. John is speaking of the redeemed 
community. Both the individual and the community are re- 
created, renewed, and restored to Paradise in salvation, and this 
cosmic restoration has already begun. St. John sees that what 
has begun in seemingly (to the eyes of the first century) isolated 
instances is really the wave of the future. The New Creation will 
fill the earth; the whole creation will be renewed. Thisis true de- 
finitively, it will be absolutely true eschatologically - and it gives 
us the pattern for our work in between, for it is also to be worked 
out progressively. The New Creation must be unfolded, its every 
implication understood and applied, by the royal priesthood in 
this age. 

The great Church Historian Philip Schaff understood this: 
"To the Lord and his kingdom belongs the whole world, with all 

547 



21:6 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

that lives and moves in it. Allis yours, says the apostle [1 Cor. 
3:22]. Religion is not a single, separate sphere of human life, but 
the divine principle by which the entire man is to be pervaded, 
refined, and made complete. It takes hold of him in his undivided 
totality, in the center of his personal being; to carry light into his 
understanding, holiness into his will, and heaven intohis heart; 
and to shed thus the sacred consecration of the new birth, and 
the glorious liberty of the children of God, over his whole in- 
ward and outward life. No form of existence can withstand the 
renovating power of God's Spirit. There is no rational element 
that may not be sanctified; no sphere of natural life that may 
not be glorified. The creature, in the widest extent of the word, 
is earnestly waiting for the manifestation of the sons of God, 
and sighing after the same glorious deliverance. The whole crea- 
tion aims toward redemption; and Christ is the second Adam, 
the new universal man, not simply in a religious but also in an 
absolute sense. The view entertained by Romish monasticism 
and Protestant pietism, by which Christianity is made to consist 
in an abstract opposition to the natural life, or inflight from the 

work-1, is quite contrary to the spirit and power of the Gospel, as 
well as false to its design. Christianity is the redemption and ren- 
ovation of the world. It must make all things new." 9 

6 And He said to me: It is done! This is the flip side of the 
declaration of Babylon's destruction (16:17), both texts serving 
as echoes of His cry on the Cross: "It is finished!" (John 19:30). 
By His redemption, Christ has won the everlasting defeat of His 
enemies and the eternal blessing of His people. 

The One who sits on the Throne names Himself (as in 1:8) 
the Alpha and the Omega (in English, "the A and the Z"), mean- 
ing the Beginning and the End, the Source, Goal, and Meaning 
of all things, the One who guarantees that the promises will be 
fulfilled. This is said herein order to confirm what is to follow, 
in Christ's promise of the Eucharist. 

We noted above that our Lord's final announcement from 
the Cross from St. John's Gospel ("It is finished!") is echoed 
here; but there is more. For after Jesus made that proclamation 



9. Philip Schaff, The Principle of Protestantism, trans. John Nevin (Phila- 
delphia: United Church Press, [1845] 1964), p. 173. 

548 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:7 

He gave up the ghost; and when the Roman soldiers came and 
saw that he had died, "one of the soldiers pierced His side with a 
spear, and immediately there came out blood and water" (John 
19:34). St. John Chrysostom commented: "Not without a pur- 
pose, or by chance, did these founts come forth, but because the 
Church was formed out of them both: The initiated are reborn 
by water, and are nourished by the Blood and the Flesh. Here is 
the origin of the Sacraments; that when you approach that 
awful cup, you may so approach as if drinking from the very 
side." 10 For this reason the Lord says: I will give to the one who 
thirsts from the spring of the Water of Life without cost. "With- 
out cost," that is, to us; because the fountain of Life springs 
forth from His own flesh. Our redemption was purchased, "not 
with perishable things like silver or gold . . . but with precious 
blood, as of a Lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of 
Christ" (1 Pet. 1:18-19). The water feeds us freely, springing up 
within us and then flowing out from us to give Life to the whole 
world (John 4:14; 7:37-39). 

7 The theme of the Seven Letters is repeated in the promise 
to the overcomer, the victorious Christian conqueror: He who 
overcomes shall inherit these things. This prophecy has never 
lost sight of its character as a practical, ethical message to the 
churches (rather than a bare "prediction" of coming events). We 
must also note that the inheritance of all these blessings is ex- 
clusively the right of the overcomer. As we have already seen, 
St. John does not allow for the existence of a defeatist Christi- 
anity. There is only one kind of Christian: the conqueror. The 
child of God is characterized by victory against all opposition, 
against the world itself (1 John 5:4). 

Further, God assures the overcomer of His faithfulness to 
His covenantal promise of salvation: I will be his God and he 
shall be My son (cf. Gen. 17:7-8; 2 Cor. 6:16-18). The highest 
and fullest enjoyment of communion with God will take place 
in heaven for eternity. But, definitively and progressively, it is 
true now. We are already living in the new heaven and the new 
earth; we are citizens of the New Jerusalem. The old things have 
passed away, and all things have become new. 



10. St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on St. John, lxxxv. 

549 



21:8 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

8 Any possibility of a universalistic interpretation is denied 
by this grim verse. God Himself gives nine 11 descriptions of the 
finally impenitent and unredeemed - a summary accounting of 
His enemies, the Dragon's followers - who "shall not inherit the 
Kingdom of God" (1 Cor. 6:9; cf. Gal. 5:21), but whose part will 
be in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone, which is the 
Second Death. Those condemned to final perdition are the cow- 
ardly, in contrast to the godly conquerors; unbelieving, in con- 
trast to those who have not denied the faith (cf. 2:13, 19; 13:10; 
14:12); sinners, in contrast to the saints (cf. 5:8; 8:3-4; 11:18; 
13:7, 10; 14:12; 18:20; 19:8); abominable (cf. 17:4-5; 21:27; Matt. 
24:15); murderers (cf. 13:15; 16:6; 17:6; 18:24); fornicators (cf. 
2:14, 20-22; 9:21; 14:8; 17:2, 4-5; 18:3;19:2); sorcerers (phar- 
makoi), a word meaning "poisonous magicians or abortionists" 
(cf. 9:21; 18:23; 22:15); 12 idolaters (cf. 2:14,20; 9:20; 13:4, 
12-15); and all liars (cf. 2:2; 3:9; 16:13; 19:20; 20:10; 21:27; 
22:15). As Sweet points out, "the list belongs, like similar lists in 
the epistles, to the context of baptism, the putting off of the 'old 
man' and putting on of the new" (cf. Gal. 5:19-26; Eph. 
4:17-5:7; Col. 3:5-10; Tit. 3:3-8). 13 

The New Jerusalem (21:9-27) 

9 And one of the seven angels who had the Seven Chalices full 
of the seven last plagues came and spoke with me, saying: 
Come here, I will show you the Bride, the Wife of the Lamb. 

10 And he carried me away in the Spirit to a great and high 
Mountain, and showed me the holy City, Jerusalem, coming 
down out of heaven from God, 



11. Nine, that is, if the "Majority Text" reading of and sinners be accepted; 
both the Textus Receptus and the so-called "critical text" (Nestle, etc.) omit 
these words, leaving eight descriptions. According to some students of sym- 
bolism, the number 9 is associated with judgment in the Bible, but the evi- 
dence for this seems slim and arbitrary; see E. W. Bullinger, Number in Scrip- 
ture (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, [1894] 1967), pp. 235-42. 

12. J. Massyngberde Ford, Revelation: Introduction, Translation, and 
Commentary (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1975), p. 345. On the use 
of pharmakeia and its cognates with reference to abortion in both pagan and 
Christian writings, see Michael J. German, Abortion and the Early Church: 
Christian, Jewish, and Pagan Attitudes in the Greco-Roman World (Downers 
Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1982), p. 48. 

13. J. P. M. Sweet, Revelation (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1979), 
p. 300. 

550 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:8 

1 1 having the glory of God. Her luminary was like a very costly 
stone, as a stone of crystal-clear jasper. 

12 She had a great and high wall, with twelve gates, and at the 
gates twelve angels; and names were written on them, which 
are those of the twelve tribes of the sons of Israel. 

13 There were three gates on the east and three gates on the north 
and three gates on the south and three gates on the west. 

14 And the wall of the City had twelve foundation stones, and 
on them were the twelve names of the twelve apostles of the 
Lamb. 

15 And the one who spoke with me had a measure, a gold reed 
to measure the City, and its gates and wall. 

16 And the City is laid out as a square, and its length is as great 
as the width; and he measured the City with the reed, twelve 
thousand stadia; its length and width and height are equal. 

17 And he measured its wall, one hundred forty-four cubits, 
according to human measurements, which are also angelic 
measurements. 

18 And the material of the wall was jasper; and the City was 
pure gold, like clear glass. 

19 The foundation stones of the City were adorned with every 
kind of precious stone. The first foundation stone was jas- 
per; the second, sapphire; the third, chalcedony; the fourth, 
emerald; 

20 the fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh, chryso- 
lite; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, topaz; the tenth, chryso- 
prase; the eleventh, jacinth; the twelfth, amethyst. 

21 And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; each one of the 
gates was a single pearl. And the street of the City was pure 
gold, like transparent glass. 

22 And I saw no Sanctuary in it, for the Lord God, the 
Almighty, and the Lamb, are its Sanctuary. 

23 And the City has no need of the sun or of the moon to shine 
upon it, for the glory of God has illumined it, and its lamp is 
the Lamb. 

24 And the nations shall walk by its light, and the kings of the 
earth shall bring their glory and honor into it. 

25 And in the daytime (for there shall be no night there) its 
gates shall never be closed; 

26 and they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into it; 

27 and nothing unclean and no one who practices abomination 
and lying, shall ever come into it, but only those whose 
names are written in the Lamb's Book of Life. 

551 



21:9-11 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

9 This verse ties the final section of Revelation together, es- 
tablishing the literary relationship of chapters 15-22. It is one of 
the seven angels who had the Seven Chalices who reveals to St. 
John the New Jerusalem, just as one of the same seven angels 
had shown him the vision of Babylon (17:1); and here the Bride, 
the Wife of the Lamb, is contrasted to the Harlot, the unfaith- 
ful wife. 

10-11 St. John is carried away in the Spirit (cf. 1:10; 4:2; 17:3) 
to a great and high Mountain, a deliberate contrast to the wil- 
derness where he saw the Harlot (17:3). We have seen (on 14:1) 
that the image of the Mountain speaks of Paradise, which was 
located on a high plateau from whence the water of life flowed 
out to the whole world (cf. 22:1-2). The apostle sees the Holy 
City, Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God. The 
picture is not, of course, intended to evoke images of space sta- 
tions, or of cities literally floating in the air; rather, it indicates 
the divine origin of "the City which has foundations, whose 
Architect and Builder is God" (Heb. 11:10). 

During J udah's apostasy, the prophet Ezekiel saw the Glory- 
Cloud depart from the Temple and travel east, to the Mount of 
Olives (Ezek. 10:18-19; 11:22-23); later, in his vision of the New 
J erusalem, he sees the Glory-Cloud returning to dwell in the 
new Temple, the Church (Ezek. 43:1-5). This was fulfilled when 
Christ, the incarnate Glory of God, ascended to His Father in 
the Cloud from the Mount of Olives (Luke 24:50-51), thereupon 
sending His Spirit to fill the Church at Pentecost. There was 
probably a later image of this transfer of God's Glory to the 
Church when on Pentecost of A.D. 66, as the priests in the Tem- 
ple were going about their duties, there was heard "a violent 
commotion and din" followed by "a voice as of a host crying, 
'We are departing hence!'" u Ernest Martin comments: "This 
departure of the Deity from the Temple at Pentecost of a.d. 66 
was exactly 36 years (to the very day) after the Holy Spirit was 
first given in power to the apostles and the others at the first 
Christian Pentecost recorded in Acts 2. And now, on the same 
Pentecost day, the witness was given that God himself was aban- 



14. Josephus, The Jewish War, vi.v,3. On this and other events of a.d. 66, 
see above, pp. 252-55. 

552 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:10-11 

doning the Temple at Jerusalem. This meant that the Temple 
was no longer a holy sanctuary and that the building was no 
more sacred than any other secular building. Remarkably, even 
Jewish records show that the Jews had come to recognize that 
the Shekinah glory of God left the Temple at this time and re- 
mained over the Mount of Olives for 3 1/2 years. During this per- 
iod a voice was heard to come from the region of the Mount of 
Olives asking the Jews to repent of their doings (Midrash Lam. 
2:11). This has an interesting bearing on the history of Christian- 
ity because we now know that Jesus Christ was crucified and res- 
urrected from the dead on the Mount of Olives 15 — the exact 
region the Jewish records say the Shekinah glory of God re- 
mained for the 31/2 years after its departure from the Temple on 
Pentecost, A.D. 66 ... . The J ewish reference states that the 
J ews failed to heed this warning from the Shekinah glory (which 
they called a Bet Kol— the voice of God), and that it left the 
earth and retreated back to heaven just before the final seige of 
J erusalem by the Remans in A.D, 70. 

". . . From Pentecost A.D. 66, no thinking person among 
the Christians, who respected these obvious miraculous signs 
associated with the Temple, could believe that the structure was 
any longer a holy sanctuary of God. J osephus himself summed 
up the conviction of many people who came to believe that God 
'had turned away even from his sanctuary' (War, 11.539), that 
the Temple was 'no more the dwelling place of God' ( War,VA9), 
because 'the Deity has fled from the holy places' (War, V.412)." 16 

Writing while these events are still uppermost in the minds of 
the J ews, St. J ohn declares that the Shekinah, the Glory of God, 
now rests on the true Holy Temple/City, the consummate Para- 
dise - the Bride of Christ. 

The New Jerusalem is further described as possessing a lumi- 
nary (phoster)- literally, a star or light-bearer (cf. Gen. 1:14, 16 
[LXX], where it is used with reference to the sun, moon, and 
stars); St. Paul uses the same term when he says that Christians 
"shine as luminaries in the world" (Phil. 2:15; cf. Dan. 12:3). 
This parallels the sun with which the Woman is clothed in 12:1 - 



15. See Ernest L. Martin, The Place of Christ's Crucifixion: Its Discovery 
and Significance (Pasadena, CA: Foundation for Biblical Research, 1984). 

16. Ernest L. Martin, The Original Bible Restored (Pasadena, CA: Founda- 
tion for Biblical Research, 1984), pp. 157f. 

553 



21:12-14 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

except that now the Bride's luminary, brighter than even the 
sun, shines with the Glory of God Himself: like a very costly 
stone, as a stone of crystal-clear jasper, in the image of Him who 

was "like a jasper stone and a sardius in appearance" (4:2-3). 
C. S. Lewis wrote: "It is a serious thing to live in a society of pos- 
sible gods and goddesses, to remember that the dullest and most 
uninteresting person you can talk to may one day be a creature 
which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to wor- 
ship, or else a horror and a corruption such as you now meet, if 
at all, only in a nightmare. All day long we are, in some degree, 
helping each other to one or the other of these destinations. It is 
in the light of these overwhelming possibilities, it is with the awe 
and circumspection proper to them, that we should conduct all 
our dealings with one another, all friendships, all loves, all play, 
all politics. There are no ordinary people. You have never talked 
to a mere mortal. . . . Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, 
your neighbour is the holiest object presented to your senses. If 
he is your Christian neighbour, he is holy in almost the same 
way, for in him also Christ vere latitat- the glorifier and the 
glorified, Glory Himself, is truly hidden." 17 

12-14 The Woman of 12:1, in addition to her glorious cloth- 
ing, wore a crown of twelve stars; this is now to be replaced with 
another twelve-starred crown - this time a "crown" of jewelled 
walls. But inasmuch as the Bride's clothing also corresponds to 
that of the enthroned Glory of 4:3, St. J ohn is careful to make 
her "crown" correspond to the circle of twelve in that passage as 
well. There, the Throne was ringed about with two twelves, the 
twenty-four enthroned elders. So here, the Bride-City is crowned 
with a double twelve: the patriarchs and the apostles. 'The transi- 
tion from a crown on the lady's brows to a ring of city walls was 
mere routine for St. J ohn's contemporaries; the standing emblem 
for a city was the figure of a lady with a battlemented crown." 18 
It is implied in Ezekiel's vision that the City has a great and 
high wall, for 'the gates about which the prophet speaks [Ezek. 
48: 31-34] are the gatehouses, porches or gate towers which con- 



17. C. S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory: And Other Addresses (New York: 
Macmillan Publishing Co., 1949; revised cd., 1980), pp. 18f. 

18. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), p. 215. 

554 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:12-14 

stitute a city wall"; 19 this is made explicit in St. John's account. 
The twelve gates of the City are guarded by twelve angels (cf. 
the cherubim who guarded Eden's gate in Gen. 3:24), and are in- 
scribed with the names ... of the twelve tribes of the sons of 
Israel, another feature in common with Ezekiel's vision (Ezek. 
48:31-34). Sweet comments: "The twelve portals of the Zodiac 
in the city of the heavens are brought under the control of the 
Bible: Israel is the nucleus of the divine society." 20 

The City has three gates on the east and three gates on the 
north and three gates on the south and three gates on the west. 
We saw in the discussion of 7:5-8 that the twelve tribes of Israel 
are listed by St. John (and before him, by Ezekiel) in such a way 
as to "balance" the sons of Leah and Rachel. The order in which 
the gates are listed (east, north, south, west) corresponds to this 
tribal list - which we would naturally expect, since St. John 
mentions the gates, with their unusual order, immediately after 
mentioning the twelve tribes. In other words, he intends for us 
to use the information in this verse in order to go back and solve 
the riddle of 7:5-8 (see the charts on pp. 210-11). 

There is another intriguing point about this verse: St. J ohn 
tells us that the gates are, literally, from the east, from the 
north, from the south, and from the west — giving, as Sweet 
suggests, "the picture of many coming from the four points of 
the compass (Isa. 49:12; Luke 13 :29)." 21 As St. John later shows, 
the nations will walk by the City's light, the kings of the earth 
will bring their wealth into her, and her gates will always be open 
to them (v. 24-26). 

St. John extends his imagery: The wall of the City had twelve 
foundation stones, and on them were the names of the twelve 
apostles of the Lamb. This, of course, is straight Pauline theol- 
ogy: "So then, you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you 
are fellow citizens with the saints, and are of God's household, 
having been built upon the foundation of the apostles and 
prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the Cornerstone, in whom 
the whole building, being fitted together is growing into a holy 
Temple in the Lord; in whom you also are being built together 



19. Ford, p. 341. 

20. Sweet, p. 304. 

21. Ibid. 



555 



21:15-17 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

into a dwelling of God in the Spirit" (Eph. 2:19-22). It should be 
needless to say also that both St. Paul's and St. John's concept 
of the City of God, the Church, is that it comprehends both Old 
and New Covenant believers within its walls. As the historic 
Church has always recognized, there is only one way of salva- 
tion, one Covenant of Grace; the fact that it has operated under 
various administrations does not affect the essential unity of the 
one people of God through the ages. 

15-17 And the one who spoke with me - one of the seven 
Chalice-angels (v. 9) - had a measure, a gold reed to measure the 
City, and its gates and wall. The Sanctuary had been measured 
earlier, as an indication of its sanctity and protection (11:1-2); 
now the City itself is to be measured, for the entire City itself is 
the Temple. To demonstrate this, St. John tells us that the City is 
laid out as a square, and its length is as great as the width: It is 
perfectly foursquare. And he measured the City with the reed 
... ; its length and width and height are equal. Like the Holy 
of Holies — the divine model for all culture - the City is a perfect 
cube (cf. 1 Kings 6:20): New Jerusalem is itself a cosmic Holy of 
Holies. At the same time, however, we should note another 
dimension of this imagery. The combination of a square with a 
mountain (v. 10) indicates the idea of a pyramid, the "cosmic 
mountain" which appears in ancient cultures throughout the 
world. The original Paradise was the first "pyramid," a Garden- 
Temple-City on top of a mountain; and when the prophets 
speak of the salvation and renovation of the earth it is almost 
always in terms of this imagery (Isa. 2:2-4; 25:6-9; 51:3; Ezek. 
36:33-36; Dan. 2:34-35, 44-45; Mic. 4:1-4). 

Each side of the City - length, breadth, and height - meas- 
ures twelve thousand stadia; the City wall is one hundred forty- 
four cubits. The absurdity of "liberalism" is embarrassingly evi- 
dent when it attempts to deal with these measurements. The 
numbers are obviously symbolic, the multiples of twelve being a 
reference to the majesty, vastness, and perfection of the 
Church. But the "literalist" feels compelled to translate those 
numbers into modern measurements, resulting in a wall 1,500 
miles long and 216 feet (or 72 yards) high. 22 St. J ohn's clear sym- 



22. See, e.g., the New American Standard Bible. 

556 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:18-21 

bols are erased, and the unfortunate Bible reader is left with just 
a jumble of meaningless numbers (what in the world does "216 
feet" signify?). Ironically, the "literalist" finds himself in the 
ridiculous position of deleting the literal numbers of God's 
Word and replacing them with meaningless symbols! 

St. John makes the seemingly casual, offhand, and intriguing 
remark that these human measurements (stadia and cubits) are 
also angelic measurements. But this is not as mysterious as it ap- 
pears at first. St. John is simply making explicit what has been 
assumed throughout his prophecy: that there are divinely or- 
dained correspondences between angels and men. The angelic 
activity seen in the Revelation is a pattern for our own activity; 
as we see God's will being done in heaven, we are to image that 
activity on earth. Heaven is the pattern for earth, the Temple is 
the pattern for the City, the angel is the model for man. Just as the 
Spirit hovered over the original creation, fashioning it into the im- 
age of the heavens, so our task is to "heavenize" the world, 
bringing God's blueprint to its most complete realization. 

18-21 The City is now described in terms of jewelry, as the 
perfect consummation of the original Edenic pattern (cf. Gen. 
2:10-12; Ezek. 28:13):23 The material of the wall was jasper, an 
image of God Himself (4:3; 21:11); and the City was pure gold, 
like clear glass (gold is an image of the Glory of God, and was 
therefore used in the Tabernacle and the Temple, and on the gar- 
ments of the priests; and the gold associated with Paradise is 
said to be "good," i.e. pure, unmixed: Gen. 2:12). The twelve 
foundation stones of the City were adorned with every kind of 
precious stone, like the High Priest's breastplate, which has four 
rows of three gems each, representing the twelve tribes of Israel 
(Ex. 28:15-21): The Bride has become adorned for her Husband 
(v. 2). The expression precious (or costly) stones is used in 
1 Kings 5:17 for the foundation stones of Solomon's Temple; 
now, in the eschatological City-Temple, they are truly "precious 
stones," in every sense. 

The first foundation stone was jasper; the second, sapphire; 
the third, chalcedony; the fourth, emerald; the fifth, sardonyx; 
the sixth, sardius; the seventh, chrysolites; the eighth, beryl; the 



23. See Chilton, Paradise Restored, pp. 32-36. 

557 



21:18-21 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

ninth, topaz; the tenth, chrysoprase; the eleventh, jacinth; the 
twelfth, amethyst. There have been several attempts to discover 
St. John's rationale for listing the stones in this order, the most 
well-known being R. H. Charles' suggestion that the jewels are 
connected to the signs of the Zodiac, and that "the signs or con- 
stellations are given in a certain order, and that exactly the re- 
verse order of the actual path of the sun through the signs. " This 
demonstrates, he says, that St. J ohn "regards the Holy City 
which he describes as having nothing to do with the ethnic spec- 
ulations of his own and past ages regarding the city of the 
gods. "2" Charles has been followed on this point by several com- 
mentators, 25 but later research has disproved this theory. 26 
Sweet points out that "Philo (Special Laws 1.87) and Josephus 
(Ant. 111.186) link the jewels with the Zodiac, but only as part of 
the cosmic symbolism which they claim for the high priest's vest- 
ments; cf. Wisd. 18:24, John's aim is similar. Any direct astro- 
logical reference is destroyed by his linking them not with the 
twelve gates of the heavenly city but with the foundations. "z 

The most sensible explanation for the order of the stones 
comes, as we would expect, from Austin Farrer. He shows that 
the stones are laid out in four rows of three gems in each row, as 
on the high priest's breastplate: "St. John does not adhere either 
to the order or to the names of the stones in the LXX Greek of 
Exodus, and any query we may raise about translations of the 
Hebrew names which he might have preferred to those offered 
by the LXX can only land us in an abyss of uncertainty. It is rea- 
sonable to suppose that he did not trouble to do more than give 
a euphonious list in some general correspondence with the Ex- 
odus catalogue. He has so arranged the Greek names, as to em- 
phasize the division by threes. All but three of them end withs 
sounds, and the three exceptions with n sounds. He has placed 
the n endings at the points of division, thus: 



24. R. H. Charles, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Revela- 
tion of St. John, 2 vols. (Edinburgh: T. &T. Clark, 1920), pp. 167f, Italics his. 

25. See, e.g., G. B. Caird, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (New 
York: Harper and Row, 1966), pp. 274-78; Rousas John Rushdoony, Thy 
Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel and Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, 
[19701 1978), pp. 221f. 

26. See T. F. Glasson, "The Order of Jewels in Rev. xxi. 19-20: A Theory 
Eliminated," Journal of Theological Studies 26 (1975), pp. 95-100. 

27. Sweet, p. 306. 

558 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:18-21 

Jaspis, sapphires, chalcedon; 
smaragdos, sardonyx, sardion; 
chrysolithos,beryllos, topazion; 
chrysoprasos, h yacinthos, ameth ystos. 

"Why should he trouble to do more? If he had made a list 
perfectly worked out, what could it have done but answer ex- 
actly to the list of tribes which he has already arranged for us in 
[Chapter] 7? And how would our wisdom be increased by that? 
St. John wishes to give body to his vision by listing the tribes; 
but he has already listed the tribes. So he lists stones which (as 
we know from Exodus) are to be deemed equivalent to the 
tribes. He makes two points: first, that the names of the apostles 
can be substituted for those of the tribes — and, after all, the 
new mystical twelvefold Israel is more truly to be described as 
companies gathered round the Apostles, than as the actual 
descendants of Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and the rest. Second, he 
puts the jasper up to be head of the list and so, no doubt, to 
stand for Judah and its apostle (cf. 7:5). And jasper is both the 
general stuff of the walls above, and the colour of the divine 
glory. The meaning of the allegory is plain. Messiah is the chief 
corner-stone; it is by being founded on him that the whole city, 
or Church, acquires the substance and colour of the divine 
glory."2 8 

Instead of being aligned with the signs of the Zodiac and 
their twelve portals, the twelve gates were twelve pearls; each 
one of the gates was a single pearl. Obviously, these gates are 
decorative and ornamental only, not designed to withstand at- 
tack; but since the City is to comprehend the whole world, there 
is no danger of attack anyway. Emphasizing the tremendous 
wealth and glory of the New Jerusalem, St. John tells us that the 
street of the City was pure gold, like transparent glass. We may 
note here that the value which men have always placed on gold 
and precious stones derives from the prior value which God has 
imputed to it. God has built into us a desire for gems, but His 
Word makes it clear that wealth is to be gained as a by-product 



28. Farrer,77?e Revelation of St. John the Divine, p. 219. Fifteen years ear- 
lier, Farrer's views on the subject were much more elaborate, as evidenced by 
his chapter on the order of the jewels in A Rebirth of Images: The Making of 
St. John's Apocalypse (London: Dacre Press, 1949), pp. 216-44. 

559 



21:22-23 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

of the Kingdom of God, and His righteousness (Matt. 6:33). 
The Harlot was adorned with jewels, and she perished with 
them; the Bride is adorned with jewels because of her union 
with the Bridegroom. It is God who gives the power to get 
wealth, for His glory (Deut. 8:18); when we turn our God-given 
wealth into an idol, he takes it away from us and stores it up for 
the righteous, who use it for God's Kingdom and are generous 
to the poor (Job 27:16-17; Prov. 13:22; 28:8; Eccl. 2:26). 

Eight centuries before St. John wrote, the prophet Isaiah 
described the coming salvation in terms of a City adorned with 
jewels: 

O afflicted one, storm-tossed, and not comforted, 

Behold, I will set your stones in fair colors, 

And your foundations I will lay in sapphires. 

Moreover, I will make your battlements of rubies, 

And your gates of sparkling jewels, 

And your entire wall of precious stones. (Isa. 54:11-12) 

it is interesting that the word translated fair colors is, in 
Hebrew, eye shadow (cf. 2 Kings 9:30; Jer. 4:30); again, the wall 
of the City of God is merely decorative: built with jewels, with 
cosmetics for "mortar." The point is that the Builder is fabu- 
lously wealthy, and supremely confident against attack. This, 
Isaiah says, is the future of the Church, the City of God. She 
will be rich and secure from enemies, as the rest of the passage 
explains: 

And all your sons will be taught of the Lord; 

And the well-being of your sons will be great. 

In righteousness you will be established; 

You will be far from oppression, for you will not fear; 

And from terror, for it will not come near you. . . . 

No weapon that is formed against you shall prosper; 

And every tongue that accuses you in judgment you will condemn. 

This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, 

And their vindication is from Me, declares the Lord. 

(Isa. 54:13-17) 

22-23 The whole City is the Temple, as we have seen -but 
there is no Sanctuary in it, for the Lord God, the Almighty, and 
the Lamb, are its Sanctuary. This is really another way of stating 

560 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:24-27 

the blessings described earlier: "He who overcomes, I will make 
him a pillar in the Sanctuary of My god, and he will not go out 
from it anymore" (3:12); "For this reason, they are before the 
Throne of God; and they serve Him day and night in His Sanc- 
tuary; and He who sits on the Throne shall spread His Taber- 
nacle over them" (7: 15). "Their city of residence is their temple; 
it contains within it no temple whose walls or doors intervene 
between them and the God they adore. God is temple to the city, 
and the city is temple to God." 29 

Indwelt by God in the Glory-Cloud, the City shines with the 
original, untreated Light of the Spirit. Thus the City has no 
need of the sun or of the moon to shine upon it, for the Glory of 
God has illumined it, and its lamp is the Lamb, as Isaiah had 
foretold: 

Arise, shine; for your Light has come, 

And the Glory of the Lord has risen upon you. 

For behold, darkness will cover the earth, 

And deep darkness the peoples; 

But the Lord will rise upon you, 

And His Glory will appear upon you. 

And nations will come to your Light, 

And kings to the brightness of your rising. . . . 

No longer will you have the sun for light by day, 

Nor for brightness will the moon give you light; 

But you will have the Lord for an everlasting Light, 

And the days of your mourning will be finished. 

Then all your peoples will be righteous; 

They will possess the land forever, 

The branch of His planting, 

The work of My hands, 

That I maybe glorified. (Isa. 60:1-3, 19-21) 

24-27 In the same passage, Isaiah prophesies that the na- 
tions of the earth will flow into the City of God, bringing all the 
wealth of their cultures: 

The wealth on the seas will be brought to you, 
To you the riches of the nations will come. 
Herds of camels will cover your land, 



29. Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine, p. 221. 

561 



21:24-27 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Young camels of Midian and Ephah. 

And all from Sheba will come, 

Bearing gold and incense 

And proclaiming the praise of the Lord. . . . 

Surely the islands look to me; 

I n the lead are the ships of Tarshish, 

Bringing your sons from afar, 

With their silver and gold, 

To the honor of the Lord your God, 

The Holy One of Israel, 

For He has endowed you with splendor. . . . 

Your gates will always stand open, 

They will never be shut, day or night, 

So that men may bring you the wealth of the nations. 

(Isa. 60:5-6,9, 11) 

St. John applies this prophecy to the New Jerusalem: The 
nations shall walk by its Light, and the kings of the earth shall 
bring their glory and honor into it. And in the daytime (for 
there shall be no night there) its gates shall never be closed; and 
they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into it; and 
nothing unclean and no one who practices abomination and 
lying, shall ever come into it, but only those whose names are 
written in the Lamb's Book of Life. This is what Jesus com- 
manded His Church to be: the City on the Hill (Matt. 5:14-16), 
the light of the world, shining before men so that they will glor- 
ify God the Father. Obviously, the New Jerusalem cannot be 
seen simply in terms of the eternal future, after the final judg- 
ment. In St. John's vision the nations still exist as nations; yet 
the nations are all converted, flowing into the City and bringing 
their treasures into it. Of course, "the other side to the fact that 
the Gentiles bring in their honour and glory, is that they do not 
bring in their abominations. . . . The access of the Gentiles here 
is in strong contrast with their access in 11:2. The mere presence 
of unregenerate heathen in the outer court spelled the ruin of 
Old Jerusalem; the New admits them sanctified, to her undivided 
precinct ."3° 

In another striking prophecy of the Gospel's effect on the 
world, Isaiah wrote: 

30. Ibid. 

562 



THE NEW JERUSALEM 21:24-27 

Thus says the Lord God: 

Behold, I will lift up My hand to the nations, 

And set up My standard to the peoples; 

And they will bring your sons in their bosom, 

And your daughters will be carried on their shoulders. 

And kings will be your guardians, 

And their princesses your nurses. 

They will bow down to you with their faces to the earth, 

And lick the dust of your feet; 

And you will know that I am the Lord; 

Those who hopefully wait for Me will not be put to shame. 

(Isa. 49:22-23). 

William Symington commented: "The prophecy refers to 
New Testament times, when the Gentiles are to be gathered unto 
the Redeemer. A prominent feature of these times shall be the 
subserviency of civil rulers to the Church, which surely supposes 
their subjection to Christ her Head. Kings shall be thy nursing- 
fathers is a similitude which imports the most tender care, the 
most enduring solicitude; not mere protection, but active and 
unwearied nourishment and support. If, according to the opin- 
ions of some, the best thing the state can do for the Church is to 
let her alone, to leave her to herself, to take no interest in her 
concerns, it is difficult to see how this view can be reconciled 
with the figure of a nurse, the duties of whose office would cer- 
tainly be ill discharged by such a treatment of her feeble 
charge ," 31 

As the Light of the Gospel shines through the Church to the 
world, the world is converted, the nations are discipled, and the 
wealth of the sinners becomes inherited by the just. This is a 
basic promise of Scripture from beginning to end; it is the pat- 
tern of history, the direction in which the world is moving. This 
is our future, the heritage of generations to come. The gift of 
His Holy Spirit guarantees the fulfillment of His promise: not 
that He will make new things, but that He will make all things 

32 

new. 



31. William Symington, Messiah the Prince: or, The Mediatorial Dominion 
of Jesus Christ (Philadelphia: The Christian Statesman Publishing Co., [18391 
1884), pp. 199f. 

32. See Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World: Sacraments and 
Orthodoxy (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press), p. 123. 

563 



22 
COME, LORD JESUS! 

As we saw in the Introduction, St. John wrote the Book of 
Revelation as an annual cycle of prophecies, meant to be read to 
the congregation (coinciding with serial Old Testament readings, 
especially Ezekiel) from one Easter to the next. * Chapter 22 thus 
brings us full circle, verses 6-21 being read exactly one year after 
Chapter 1 was read. For that reason, as well as recapitulating 
many of the themes of the prophecy, Chapter 22 also has much 
in common with Chapter 1. We read again, for example, that the 
prophecy is of "things that must shortly take place" (22:6; cf. 
1:1); that it is communicated by an angel (22:6; cf. 1:1) to St. 
John (22:8; cf. 1:1, 4, 9); that it is a message intended for God's 
"bond-servants" (22:6; cf. 1:1); that there is a special blessing for 
those who "keep" its words (22:7; cf. 1:3); and that it specifically 
involves the Testimony of Christ (22:16, 18, 20; cf. 1:2,5, 9), the 
Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last (22:13; cf. 1:8, 17), 
who is "coming quickly" (22:7, 12, 20; cf. 1:7). 

Paradise Restored (22:1-5) 

1 And he showed me a River of the Water of Life, clear as 
crystal, coming from the Throne of God and of the Lamb, 

2 in the middle of its street. And on each side of the River was 
Tree of Life, bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit 
every month; and the leaves of the Tree were for the healing 
of the nations. 

3 And there shall no longer be any Curse; and the Throne of 
God and of the Lamb shall be in it, and His servants shall 
serve Him; 



1. See M. D. Goulder, "The Apocalypse as an Annual Cycle of Prophecies," 
New Testament Studies 27, No. 3 (April 1981), pp. 342-67. 

565 



22:1-2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

4 and they shall see His face, and His name shall be in their 
foreheads. 

5 And there shall no longer be any Night; and they shall not 
have need of the light of a lamp nor the light of the sun, be- 
cause the Lord God shall illumine them; and they shall reign 
forever and ever. 

1-2 The vision of the New Jerusalem continues: the Chalice- 
angel (21:9) shows St. John a River of the Water of Life, clear as 
crystal, coming from the Throne of God and of the Lamb, in 
the middle of its street. The scene is based, first, on the Garden 
of Eden, in which springs bubbled up out of the ground (Gen. 
2:6) to forma river, which then parted into four heads and went 
out to water the earth (Gen. 2:10-14). This image is later adopted 
by Ezekiel in his vision of the New Covenant Temple. In the Old 
Covenant, people had to journey to the Temple to be cleansed, 
but that will no longer be true; for in New Covenant times the 
great bronze Laver in the southeast corner of the House (2 Chron. 
4:10) tips over and spills its contents out under the door, becom- 
ing a mighty river of grace and life for the world, even trans- 
forming the waters of the Dead Sea: 2 

Then he brought me back to the door of the House; and 
behold, water was flowing from under the threshold of the 
House toward the east, for the House faced east. And the water 
was flowing down from under, from the right side of the House, 
from south of the altar. And he brought me out by way of the 
north gate and led me around on the outside to the outer gate by 
way of the gate that faces east. And behold, water was trickling 
from the south side. 

When the man went out toward the east with a line in his 
hand, he measured a thousand cubits, and led me through the 
water, water reaching the ankles. 

Again he measured a thousand and led me through the water, 
water reaching the knees. 

Again he measured a thousand and led me through the water, 
water reaching the loins. 



2. On the symbolism associated with the Dead Sea (the site of Sodom and 
Gomorrah) see David Chilton, Paradise Restored: A Biblical Theology of Domin- 
on (Ft. Worth, TX: Dominion Press, 1985), pp. 52f. For another illustration of 
the difference between the 'static' grace of the Old Covenant and the 'dynamic' 
grace of the New Covenant, compare Hag. 2:10-14 with Mark 5:25-34. 

566 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:1-2 

Again he measured a thousand; and it was a river that I could 
not ford, for the water had risen, enough water to swim in, a 
river that could not be forded. 

And he said to me, "Son of man, have you seen this?" Then 
he brought me back to the bank of the river. Now when I had 
returned, behold, on the bank of the river there were very many 
trees on the one side and on the other. Then he said to me, 
"These waters go out toward the eastern region and go down 
into the Arabah; then they go toward the sea, being made to flo w 
into the sea, and the waters of the sea become fresh. And it will 
come about that every living creature that swarms in every place 
where the river goes will live. And there will be very many fish, 
for these waters go there, and the others become fresh; so every- 
thing will live where the river goes." (Ezek. 47:1-9) 

Ezekiel said that "on the bank of the river there were very 
many trees on the one side and on the other"; St. John expands 
on this and tells us that on each side of the River was Ifree of 
Life - not a single tree only, but forests of Tree-of-Life lining 
the riverbanks. The blessing which Adam forfeited has been re- 
stored in overwhelming superabundance, for what we have 
gained in Christ is, as St. Paul said, "much more" than what we 
lost in Adam: 

For if by the transgression of the one the many died, much 
more did the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one 
man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many. . . . For if by the trans- 
gression of the one, death reigned through the one, much more 
those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of 
righteousness will reign in life through the One, J esus Christ. . . . 
Where sin increased, grace abounded all the more, that, as sin 
reigned in death, even so grace might reign through righteous- 
ness to eternal life through J esus Christ our Lord. (Rem. 
5:15-21; cf.V. 9-10) 

Paradise is not, therefore, only "restored"; it is consum- 
mated, its every implication brought to complete fruition and 
fulfillment. 

The word Tree is xulon, often used with reference to the 
Cross (cf. Acts 5:30;10:39;13:29; 1 Pet. 2:24); in fact, it is likely 
that Christ was crucified on a living tree, as His words in Luke 
23:31 imply: "For if they do these things in the green tree, what 

567 



22:1-2 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

will happen in the dry?" St. Paul saw Christ's crucifixion as the 
fulfillment of the Old Testament curse on one who is hanged on 
a tree (Gal. 3:13; cf. Deut. 21:23; Josh. 10:26-27). 3 St. Irenaeus 
saw the Cross as the Tree of Life, contrasting it with the Tree of 
the Knowledge of Good and Evil, through which man fell: Jesus 
Christ "has destroyed the handwriting of our debt, and fastened 
it to the Cross [Col. 2:14]; so that, just as by means of a tree we 
were made debtors to God, so also by means of a tree we may 
obtain the remission of our debt."4 The image was quickly 
adopted in thes ymbolism of the early Church: "Early Christian 
art indicates a close relationship between the tree of life and the 
cross. The cross of Christ, the wood of suffering and death, is 
for Christians a tree of life. In the tomb paintings of the 2nd 
century it is thus depicted for the first time as the symbol of vic- 
tory over death. It then recurs again and again. The idea that 
the living trunk of the cross bears twigs and leaves is a common 
motif in Christian antiquity."5 

As in Ezekiel's vision (Ezek. 47:12), the Tree of Life is con- 
tinuously productive, bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its 
fruit every month in a never-ending supply of life for the over- 
comes (2:7), those who do His commandments (22:14). St. 
John goes onto make it clear that the power of Christ's Tree will 
transform the whole world: The leaves of the Tree were for the 
healing of the nations. Again, St. John does not conceive of this 
as a blessing reserved only for eternity, although its effects con- 
tinue into eternity. The Tree of Life is sustaining believers now, 
as they partake of Christ: 

Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My Word, and 
believes in Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come 



3. The word cross (stauros) can refer either to the tree itself (considered as 
the instrument of execution) or to the patibulum, (the upper crosspiece to 
which Christ's hands were nailed, and which was then nailed to the tree). For a 
discussion of this whole issue, see Ernest L. Martin, The Place of Christ's Cru- 
cifixion: Its Discovery and Significance (Pasadena, CA: Foundation for Bibli- 
cal Research, 1984), pp. 75-82. 

4. St. Irenaeus, Agai nst Heresies, v.xvii.3. 

5. Johannes Schneider, in Gerhard Kittel and Gerhard Friedrich, eds., 
Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, 10 vols., trans. Geoffrey W. 
Bromily (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1964-76), Vol. 
5, pp. 40-41. 

568 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:3-4 

into judgment, but has passed out of death into life. Truly, truly, 
I say to you, an hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall 
hear the Voice of the Son of God; and those who hear shall live. 
(J ohn 5:24-25) 

In the same way, St. John expects the healing virtues of the 
Cross to give Life to the nations as nations, in this world; the 
nations, he has told us, are made up of "those whose names are 
written in the Lamb's Book of Life," since the nations as such 
are admitted into the Holy City (21 :24-27). The River of Life is 
flowing now (John 4:14; 7:37-39), and will continue to flow in an 
ever-increasing stream of blessing to the earth, healing the na- 
tions, bringing an end to lawlessness and warfare (Zech. 14:8-11; 
cf. Mic. 4:1-4). This vision of the Church's glorious future, 
earthly and heavenly, mends the fabric that was torn in Genesis. 
In Revelation we see Man redeemed, brought back to the Moun- 
tain, sustained by the River and the Tree of Life, regaining his 
lost dominion and ruling as a priest-king over the earth. This is 
our privilege and heritage now, definitively and progressively, in 
this age; and it will be ours fully in the age to come. 

3-4 Thus there shall no longer be any Curse, in fulfillment of 
the ancient promises: 

Thus says the Lord God: On the Day that I cleanse you from 
all your iniquities, I will cause the cities to be inhabited, and the 
waste places will be rebuilt. And the desolate land will be culti- 
vated instead of being a desolation in the sight of everyone who 
passed by. And they will say, "This desolate land has become like 
the Garden of Eden; and the waste, desolate, and ruined cities 
are fortified and inhabited." Then the nations that are left round 
about you will know that 1, the Lord, have rebuilt the ruined 
places; I, the Lord, have spoken and will do it. (Ezek. 36:33-36) 

The Throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in the Holy 
City, as St. John implied in 21:3, 11, 22-23. It is striking that the 
citizens are called His servants - an expression that is primarily 
used to describe prophets (cf. 1:1; 10:7; 11:18; 15:3; 19:2, 5 [cf. 
18:24]; 22:6, 9). As we have seen, this has been a significant 
theme in Revelation, the fulfillment of the Old Covenant hope 
of communion with God: All the Lord's people are prophets, 
for the Lord has put HisSpirit upon them (Num. 11:29). There- 

569 



22:5 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

fore they shall see His face, and His name shall be in their fore- 
heads. Kline comments: "Behind the imagery of Revelation 22:4 
are the figures of Moses and Aaron. Aaron bore on his forehead 
the name of the Lord inscribed on the crown on the front of the 
priestly mitre. The very countenance of Moses was transformed 
into a reflective likeness of the Glory-Face, the Presence-Name 
of God, when God talked to him 'mouth to mouth' (Num. 12:8) 
out of the Glory-cloud. As the Name and the Glory are alike 
designations of the Presence of God in the theophanic cloud, so 
both name and glory describe the reflected likeness of God. To 
say that the overcomes in the New Jerusalem bear the name of 
Christ in their forehead is to say that they reflect the glory of 
Christ, which is to say that they bear the image of the glorified 
Christ." 6 Thus, says St. Paul, all the saints now see His face: 
"We all, with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the Glory of 
the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory 
to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit" (2 Cor. 3:18). And, 
because all the saints are priests (Rev. 1:6; 20:6), we wear His 
name in our forehead (3:12; 7:3; 14:1), serving Him in His Tem- 
ple (7:15). 

5 As St. John told us in 21:22-25, within the walls of the 
Holy City there shall no longer be any Night; and they shall not 
have need of the light of a lamp nor the light of the sun, because 
the Lord God shall illumine them. In our study of 'the new 
heaven and earth" in Chapter 21, we took note of how St. Peter 
urged the churches to holy living in light of the approaching age 
of righteousness, which was to be ushered in at the fall of the 
Old Covenant with the destruction of the Temple (2 Pet. 3:1-14). 
Similarly, St. Paul exhorted the Christians of Rome to godly liv- 
ing in view of the imminent dawning of the Day: 

And this do, knowing the time, that it is already the hour for 
you to awaken from sleep; for now salvation is nearer to us than 
when we first believed. The Night is almost gone, and the Day is 
at hand. Let us therefore lay aside the deeds of darkness and put 
on the armor of light. (Rem. 13:11-12) 



6. Meredith G. Kline, Images of the Spirit (Grand Rapids: Baker Book 
House, 1980), pp. 54f. 

570 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:5 

In much the same way he wrote to the Thessalonians, argu- 
ing that their lives must be characterized by the approaching 
Dawn rather than by the fading Night: 

For you yourselves know full well that the Day of the Lord 
will come just like a thief in the night. While they are saying, 
"Peace and safety!" then destruction will come upon them sud- 
denly like birth pangs upon a woman with child; and they shall 
not escape. But you, brethren, are not in darkness, that the Day 
should overtake you like a thief; for you are all sons of Light 
and sons of Day. We are not of Night nor of Darkness; so then 
let us not sleep as others do, but let us be alert and sober. For 
those who sleep do their sleeping at night, and those who get 
drunk get drunk at night. But since we are of Day, let us be 
sober, having put on the breastplate of faith and love, and as a 
helmet, the hope of salvation. For God has not destined us for 
wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus 
Christ. (1 Thess. 5:2-9) 

The era of the Old Covenant was the time of the world's 
dark Night; with the Advent of Jesus Christ has come the age of 
Light, the great Day of the Lord, established at His Ascension 
and His full inauguration of the New Covenant: 

Arise, shine; for your Light has come, 
And the Glory of the Lord has risen upon you. 
For behold, Darkness will cover the earth, 
And deep Darkness the peoples; 

But the Lord will rise upon you, 

And His Glory will appear upon you. 

And nations will come to your Light, 

And kings to the brightness of your rising. (Isa. 60:1-3) 

For behold, the Day is coming, burning like a furnace; and 
all the arrogant and every evildoer will be chaff, and the Day that 
is coming will set them ablaze, says the Lord of hosts, so that it 
will leave them neither root nor branch. But for you who fear 
My name the Sun of righteousness will rise with healing in His 
wings; and you will go forth and skip about like calves from the 
stall. (Mai. 4:1-2) 

Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, 

For He has visited us and accomplished redemption for His 
people. . . . 

571 



22:5 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

Because of the tender mercy of our God, 

With which the Sunrise from on high shall visit us, 

To shine upon those who sit in Darkness and the shadow of Death, 

To guide our feet into the way of peace. (Luke 1:68, 78-79) 

In Him was Life, and the Life was the Light of men. And the 
Light shines in the darkness, and the Darkness did not over- 
power it. (J ohn 1:4-5) 

Again therefore J esus spoke to them, saying, "I am the Light 
of the world; he who follows Me shall not walk in the Darkness, 
but shall have the Light of Life." (J ohn 8:12) 

The god of this age has blinded the minds of the unbelieving, 
that they might not see the Light of the Gospel of the glory of 
Christ, who is the Image of God. . . . For God, who said, 
"Light shall shine out of darkness," is the One who has shone in 
our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God 
in the face of Christ. (2 Cor. 4:4, 6) 

Giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified us to share in 
the inheritance of the saints in Light. For He delivered us from 
the domain of Darkness, and transferred us to the Kingdom of 
His beloved Son. (Col. 1:12-13) 

Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without waver- 
ing, for He who promised is faithful; and let us consider how to 
stimulate one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our 
own assembling together, as is the habit of some, but encourag- 
ing one another; and all the more, as you see the Day drawing 
near. (Heb. 10:23-25) 

And so we have the prophetic word made more sure, to 
which you do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark 
place, until the Day dawns and the Morning Star arises in your 
hearts. (2 Pet. 1:19) 

Again we must remember that the New Covenant age is re- 
garded in Scripture as definitively and progressively an era of 
Light, in contrast to the relative Darkness of pre-Messianic 
times. In the absolute and ultimate sense, the Light will come 
only at the end of the world, at the Second Coming of Christ. 
But, as the apostles contemplated the end of the Old Covenant 
era, during which the nations were enslaved to demons, they 
spoke of the imminent Dawn as the age of righteousness, when 

572 



COME, LORD JESUS ! 22:5 

the power of the Gospel would sweep across the earth, smashing 
idolatry and flooding the nations with the Light of God's grace. 
Relatively speaking, the whole history of the world from Adam's 
Fall to Christ's Ascension was Night; relatively speaking, the 
whole future of the world is bright Day. This follows the pattern 
laid down at the creation, in which the heavens and earth move 
eschatologically from evening to morning, the lesser light being 
succeeded by the greater light, going from glory to Glory (Gen. 
1:5, 8, 13, 19, 23, 31): Now, St. J ohn tells us, J esus Christ has ap- 
peared, and is "coming quickly," as the bright Morning Star (v. 16). 
In his concluding comment on the restoration of Paradise, 
St. J ohn tells us that the royal priesthood shall reign, not just 
for a "millennium," but forever and ever: "The reign of the 
thousand years (20:4-6) is but the beginning of a regal life and 
felicity which are to continue through all aeons to come. And so 
the kingdom of the saints of the Most High will be most truly, as 
Daniel wrote, 'an everlasting kingdom' (Dan. 7:27). This is the 
'eternal life' of Matthew 25:46, just as the second death, the lake 
of fire, is the 'eternal punishment' into which the 'cursed' go 
away.'" 

Final Warnings and Blessings (22:6-21) 

6 And he said to me: These words are faithful and true. And 
the Lord, the God of the spirits of the prophets, sent His 
angel to-show to His servants the things which must shortly 
take place. 

7 And behold, I am coming quickly. Blessed is he who keeps 
the words of the prophecy of this book. 

8 And I, J ohn, am the one who heard and saw these things. 
And when I heard and saw, I fell down to worship at the feet 
of the angel who showed me these things. 

9 And he said to me: Don't do that! I am a fellow servant of 
yours and of your brethren the prophets and of those who 
keep the words of this book; worship God. 

10 And he said to me: Do not seal up the words of the prophecy 
of this book, for the time is near. 

11 Let the one who does wrong, still do wrong; and let the one 
who is filthy, still be filthy; and let the one who is righteous, 



7. Milton Terry, Biblical Apocalyptics: A Study of the Most Notable Reve- 
lations of God and of Christ in the Canonical Scriptures (New York: Eaton 
and Mains, 1898), p. 471. 

573 



22:6-7 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

still practice righteousness; and let the one who is holy, still 
keep himself holy. 

12 Behold, I am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me, to 
render to every man according to what he has done. 

13 I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the 
Beginning and the End. 

14 Blessed are those who do H is commandments, that they may 
have the right to the Tree of Life, and may enter by the gates 
into the City. 

15 Outside are the dogs and the sorcerers and the fornicators 
and the murderers and the idolaters, and everyone who loves 
and practices lying. 

16 I , J esus, have sent My angel to testify to you these things for 
the churches. I am the Root and the Offspring of David, the 
bright Morning Star. 

17 And the Spirit and the Bride say: Come. And let the one 
who hears say: Come. And let the one who is thirsty come; 
let the one who wishes take the water of life without cost. 

18 I testify to everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of 
this book: If anyone adds to them, God shall add to him the 
plagues which are written in this book; 

19 and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this 
prophecy, God shall take away his part from the Tree of Life 
and from the Holy City, which are written in this book. 

20 He who testifies to these things says: Yes, I am coming 
quickly! Amen. Come, Lord J esus! 

21 The grace of the Lord J esus Christ be with all the saints. 
Amen. 

6-7 The apostle's final section reviews and summarizes the 
central messages of the book. Appropriately, St. John's angelic 
guide begins by testifying that these words are faithful and true, 
in keeping with the character of their Author (1:5; 3:14; 19:11; cf. 
19:9; 21:5); they cannot fail to be fulfilled. And the Lord, the 
God of the spirits of the prophets, sent His angel to show to His 
servants the things which must shortly take place. The word 
spirits here may refer to the "Seven Spirits" (cf. 1:4; 4:5), i.e. the 
Holy Spirit in His manifold operation through the prophets (cf. 
19:10: "the Spirit of prophecy"), but it is possible also to under- 
stand the expression in the sense of 1 Corinthians 14:32- the 
spirit of each prophet in particular. In any case, St. John has re- 
peatedly emphasized throughout his prophecy that "all the 

574 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:8-9 

Lord's people are prophets" in this age, having ascended with 
Christ to the heavenly Council-chamber. The function of the 
Book of Revelation is that of an official "memo" to all members 
of the Council, telling them what they need to know regarding 
imminent events. The consistent message of the whole book is 
that the things of which it speaks - the final end of the Old Cov- 
enant and the firm establishment of the New — are on the verge 
of fulfillment, irrevocably destined to take place shortly. 

Speaking on behalf of Christ, the angel repeats the theme of 
the prophecy, underscoring its immediacy: Behold, I am coming 
quickly (cf. 1:7;2:5, 16; 3:11; 16:15); in fact, the word come or 
coming (erchomai) is used seven times in Chapter 22 alone: 'The 
frequency of the assurance now before us, shows with what 
earnestness it was made." 8 Our study of the New Testament is 
drastically off-course if we fail to take into account the apostolic 
expectation of an imminent Coming of Christ (not the Second 
Coming) which would destroy "this generation" of Israel and 
fully establish the New Covenant Church. This message was not 
to be taken lightly, and there is an implicit warning in Revela- 
tion's Sixth Beatitude, a promise that echoes the First (1:3): 
Blessed is he who keeps the words of the prophecy of this book. 
Again, St. John stresses the ethical response of his audience to 
the truths they have heard. He has given them commandments 
to obey (cf. v. 14), not only explicitly but implicitly: He has re- 
vealed the activity of heaven as a pattern for life on earth (cf. 
Matt. 6:10). 

8-9 St. John emphasizes that he, the Apostle, is the one who 
heard and saw these things (cf. his similar language in 1 John 
1:1-3; 4:14). And when I heard and saw, I fell down to worship at 
the feet of the angel who showed me these things. And he said to 
me: Don't do that! I am a fellow servant of yours and of your 
brethren the prophets and of those who keep the words of this 
book; worship God. As at 19:10, it is the angelic declaration of a 
Beatitude which causes St. John to fall down in reverence before 
the messenger. As we saw on that passage, St. John was not 
offering divine worship to the angel, but rather honor to a 



8. Moses Stuart, Commentary on the Apocalypse, 2 vols. (Andover: Allen, 
Morrill, and Wardwell, 1845), Vol. 2, p. 390. 

575 



22:10 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

superior. Even so, in the New Covenant age that is no longer ap- 
propriate. Angelic superiority over man was intended only to be 
temporary, an expedient after Adam forfeited his responsibility 
as guardian of the sanctuary (Gen. 2:15; 3:24). Now that Christ 
has ascended to the Throne, His people are saints, with access to 
the sanctuary as God's counselors and confidants; indeed, says 
St. Paul, the saints are destined to rule not only the world but 
angels as well (1 Cor. 6:1-3). The angel, though exalted and pow- 
erful, is no more than a fellow servant of the apostle and his 
brethren the prophets - the other members of the Christian 
Church, all those who keep the words of this book. The believer 
is a member of the heavenly council, and is able to worship God 
face to face (cf. v. 4). Again, this shows that the blessings enum- 
erated in these closing chapters are not reserved for the consum- 
mation alone, but have already been granted to God's people; 
otherwise, the angel would have accepted St. John's act of rever- 
ence. We have direct access to God's Throne. 

That this incident had to be repeated almost word-for-word 
demonstrates both the centrality of this concern to the apostle, 
and how hard it is for us to learn it. It may well be said that the 
most important teaching of the Book of Revelation is that Jesus 
Christ has ascended to the Throne; and the second most impor- 
tant lesson is that we have ascended to heaven with Him. 

10 And he said to me: Do not seal up the words of the 
prophecy of this book, for the time is near. Again the angel em- 
phasizes the imminence of the prophecy's fulfillment. For this 
reason St. John is forbidden to seal up the words of the book. 
We have already had occasion (on 10:4) to contrast this with the 
command to Daniel to "conceal the words and seal up the book 
until the time of the end" (Dan. 12:4). Because his prophecy 
spoke of the distant future, Daniel was ordered to seal it up; 
because St. John's prophecy refers to the imminent future, he is 
ordered to set it loose. "Indeed, these are the very days for 
which Daniel wrote, and St. John has been inspired to 'unseal' 
him." 9 



9. Austin Farrer, The Revelation of St. John the Divine (Oxford: At the 
Clarendon Press, 1964), p. 225. 

576 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:11-14 

11 Let the one who does wrong, still do wrong; and let the 
one who is filthy, still be filthy; and let the one who is righteous, 
still practice righteousness; and let the one who is holy, still keep 

himself holy. The great battle of the first century was reaching 
its climax, and the angel calls for the differentiation of the right- 
eous and the wicked, the attainment of "epistemological self- 
consciousness" through differing responses to God's grace; 10 it 
constitutes a prayer "that the world may come out black and 
white, so as to be ripe for judgment ." n Self-consciousness on 
both sides of the contest is always a prelude to judgment (cf. 
Ezek. 3:27: "He who hears, let him hear; and he who refuses, let 
him refuse"). 

12-13 The Lord again promises the imminence of His com- 
ing judgment on Israel and deliverance of His Church: Behold, I 
am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me, to render to 
every man according to what he has done (cf. 2:23; 20:12-13). 
Christ had promised that this would be the result of His 
first-century Coming in His Kingdom (Matt. 16:27-28). Con- 
firming the promise with an oath, He swears by Himself as the 
Lord of history, the sovereign Controller of all things: I am the 
Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and 
the End. 

14 Continuing to speak through the angel, Christ pro- 
nounces the Seventh Beatitude of Revelation: Blessed are those 
who do His commandments, the present participle emphasizing 
the ongoing duty of obedience. God requires not just a one-time 
profession of faith, but a continuing life of repentance and con- 
fessing Christ. Obedience characterizes the redeemed, as St. 
John declares elsewhere: 

And by this we know that we have come to know Him, if we 
keep His commandments. The one who says, "I have come to 
know Him," and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, 
and the truth is not in him; but whoever keeps His Word, in him 
the love of God has truly been perfected. By this we know that 



10. See Gary North, "Common Grace, Eschatology, and Biblical Law," Ap- 
pendix C (below). 

11. Fairer, p. 225. 

577 



22:15-16 PART FIVE: THE SEVEN CHALICES 

we are in Him: The one who says he abides in Him ought himself 
to walk in the same manner as He walked. (1 J ohn 2:3-6) 

These alone have the right to the Tree of Life (promised to 
the overcomes in 2:7) and may enter by the gates into the City 
(promised to the overcomes in 3:12). Again, we should note 
that the nations of the earth will enter into the City (21:24-26), 
which means that the nations and their rulers will be character- 
ized by righteousness, by the world-conquering faith of the 
overcomer. 

15 Christ provides another catalogue (cf. 21:8), a sevenfold 
one this time, of those who are excluded from blessing, banished 
outside the City, into the fiery Gehenna (Isa. 66:24; Mark 
9:43-48). First are mentioned the dogs, scavengers that are re- 
garded with disgust and revulsion throughout the Bible (cf. 
Prov. 26:11). In Deuteronomy 23:18, sodomites are called 
"dogs," 12 and Christ equated dogs with the unclean nations 
(Mark 7:26-28). St. Paul applies the term, in what must have 
been a shocking reference, to the false circumcision, the Jews 
who had betrayed the Covenant by rejecting Christ (Phil. 3:2) 
and have thus joined the heathen and the perverts. That is prob- 
ably the reference here (cf. 2:9; 3:9). God does not give what is 
holy unto dogs (Matt. 7:6). The other categories mentioned in 
this verse, the sorcerers and the fornicators and the murderers 
and the idolaters, and everyone who loves and practices lying, 
are also listed at 21:8, 27. Christians have renounced all these 
ungodly actions by their baptism to newness of life. 

16 I, Jesus, have sent My angel to testif y to you these things 

for the churches; the word you is plural, meaning that St. John's 
audience is directly addressed by the Lord; and the message is 
for the churches generally ("all the saints," v. 21). Christ repeats 
the lesson of 5:5, that He is the bringer of the New Covenant, 
the "Charter for Humanity" through which all nations will be 
blessed: I am the Root and the Offspring of David, both the 
Source and Culmination of the Davidic line. Hengstenberg 
comments: "Because Jesus is the root, he is also the race of 



12. See Rousas John Rushdoony, The Institutes of Biblical Law (Nutley, 
NJ: The Craig Press, 1973), pp. 89f. 

578 



COME, LORD JESUS! 22:17 

David. In him alone is the race preserved; while otherwise it 
would have vanished without a trace. The race of David is more 
than his offspring; it indicates that the race of David should, 
save for Christ, have ceased to exist. The race of David is here 
brought into view in respect to the unconquerable strength and 
everlasting dominion promised it by God (comp. Luke 1:32-33). 
What he testifies, in whom the glorious race of David culmin- 
ates, will assuredly go into fulfillment ." 13 

In Numbers 24:17, Balaam prophesied of Christ under the 
symbols of a star and a scepter; Christ's scepter is promised to 
the overcomer in Thyatir a (2:26-27), in an allusion to Psalm 
2:8-9; then, as the promise to the overcomer continues, Christ 
offers Himself as the Morning Star (2:28), and that promise is 
repeated here, partly in order to complement the promise of 
Light in verse 5, and partly in keeping with other connections 
which this passage shares with the Letters to both Pergamum 
(the mention of idolatry and the allusion to Balaam) and Thya- 
tira (the mention of sorcery and fornication). 

17 And the Spirit and the Bride say: Come! This is a prayer 
to Jesus, the Spirit inspiring the Bride to call for Him (cf. Cant. 
8:14: "Hurry, my beloved!") to come in salvation and judgment, 
even as the four living creatures called forth the Four Horsemen 
(6:1, 3, 5, 7). The liturgical response is then set forth: And let 
the one who hears say: Come! Finally, the expression is inverted 
(cf. 3:20-21, where Christ first asks to dine with us, then invites 
us to sit with Him), for the certainty of Christ's coming to us in 
salvation enables us to come to Him for the Water of Life: And 
let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who wishes take the 
Water of Life without cost. The expression without cost is 
dorean, meaning as a gift, used by Christ in a particularly telling 
reference: 'They hated me without a cause" (J ohn 15:25). Our 
salvation is free, "without a cause" as far as our own merit is 
concerned; its source and reason are wholly in Him, and not at 
all in us. We are "justified as a gift by His grace through the re- 
demption which is in Christ J esus" (Rem. 3:24). 



13. E. W. Hengstenberg, The Revelation of St. John, 2 vols., trans. Patrick 
Fairbairn (Cherry Hill, NJ: Mack Publishing Co., n. d.), Vol. 2, p. 373. 

579 



22:18-21 PART FIVE : THE SEVEN CHALICES 

18-19 Now Jesus states what many regard as the most sol- 
emn and terrifying words in the entire prophecy: I testify to 

everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: If 
anyone adds to them, God shall add to him the plagues which 
are written in this book; and if anyone takes away from the 
words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his 
part from the Tree of Life and from the Holy City, which are 
written in this book (cf. Deut. 4:2;12:32; 29:20). 14 Rushdoony 
comments: "In a very real sense, Revelation concludes Scrip- 
ture. It speaks deliberately as a final word. Moses, in Deuteron- 
omy 4:2, declared, Ye shall not add unto the word which I com- 
mand you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it. . . .' Words 
were to be added by others, but the revelation would be one un- 
changing word. Now, with the conclusion of Scripture, adding 
or removing the 'words' of the book is forbidden; words can no 
longer be added. The self-conscious parallel and alteration are 
too obvious to be accidental. The last words have been given of 
the unchanging word." 15 

20-21 He who testifies to these things, the True and Faithful 
Witness, says: Yes, I am coming quickly! In this closing liturgy, 
the Church answers: Amen! Come, Lord Jesus! The Church 
asks for judgment; she specifically requests her Lord to come 
(Maranatha!), bringing Anathema for all His enemies (1 Cor. 
16:22), but with grace for all the saints. As we saw on 3:14, the 
familiar word Amen is an oath, a calling down upon oneself the 
curses of the covenant, and a solemn recognition that we would 
have no grace at all but for the fact that J esus Christ is our 
"Amen," who underwent the Curse for us. Therefore, as St. 
Ambrose exhorted, "What the mouth speaks, let the mind with- 
in confess; what the tongue utters, let the heart feel." 16 



14. It seems most strange that, of all places, these two verses should have 
any variant readings at all; yet, in fact, there are, not one, but at least thirteen 
separate points in dispute! See Zane C. Hodges and Arthur L. Farstad,eds., 
The Greek New Testament According to the Majority Text (Nashville: Thomas 
Nelson Publishers, 1982). 

15.Rousas John Rushdoony, Thy Kingdom Come: Studies in Daniel and 
Revelation (Tyler, TX: Thoburn Press, [1970] 1978), p. 225. Italics added. 

16. St. Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 54. 

580 



CONCLUSION: THE 
LESSONS OF REVELATION 



If the Book of Revelation is primarily a prophecy to the flrSt- 
century Church, is it of any value to Christians today? As a matter 
of fact, that question faces us with regard to every book in the 
Bible, not just Revelation; for all Scripture was written "to" some- 
one else, and not "to" us. But St. Paul stated a fundamental princi- 
ple of Biblical Interpretation: "All Scripture IS inspired by God and 
profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in 
righteousness; that the man of God may be adequate, equipped 
for every good work" (2 Tim. 3:16-17). God's judgment on Israel 
for her disobedience can happen to us as well, if we do not per- 
severe in faith and works. If even Israel could be broken off from 
the COvenantal Tree of Life, so can we: 'They were broken off for 
their unbelief, but you stand by your faith. Do not be conceited, 
but fear; for if God did not spare the natural branches, neither 
will He spare you. Behold then the kindness and severity of God: 
to those who fell, severity; but to you, God's kindness, if you 
continue inHlS kindness; otherwise you also will be cut off. And 
they also, if they do not continue in their unbelief, will be grafted 
in; for God is able to graft them in again" (Rem. 11:20-23). 

The Book of Revelation therefore has continuing lessons for 
the Church of all ages. I have summarized some of these lessons 
below, providing references to the pages in the commentary 
where they are discussed. The following is not to be taken as an 
exhaustive list, but as a rough sketch for topical study and review. 

The Interpretation of Prophecy 

The purpose of prophecy is not simply "prediction"; rather, 

it is a summons to ethical living in terms of God's standards (P. 
11). It is therefore not "history written in advance" (pp. 27-29). 
Our standard for interpreting prophecy must be the Bible itself 

581 



CONCLUSION 

(p p. 29-31). The Book of Revelation is written in "signs," i.e. 
Symbols (p. 53). Symbolism is inescapable; in fact, everything is 
symbolic (pp. 32-33). Symbolism is analogical, not realistic; it IS 
fluid, not a "code" (pp. 33-34). The primary controls on undue 
speculation must be faithfulness to the Bible's system of doctrine, 
and faithfulness to the Bible's system of symbolism (pp. 38-39). 

The Book of Revelation 

The Book of Revelation has a contemporary focus; it is not 
about the Second Coming (pp. 39-44), but about the inaugura- 
tion of the New Covenant era during the Last Days - the period 
A.D. 30-70, from the Ascension of Christ to the fall of J erusalem 
(p. 51). Written sometime within the final decade of Israel's his- 
tory (pp. 3-6) in the distinctive form of the Biblical Covenant 
Lawsuit (pp. 10-20, 46-47, 49-50, 85-86, 141-44, 225-27, 379-82), 
itsmain prophecies were to be fulfilled shortly (p. 51-55). The 
prophecy was intended to be read in the liturgical setting of the 
first-century churches (p. 54), and so begins with Seven Letters 
to the churches of Asia Minor. Each Letter recapitulates the 
five-part structure of the historic Biblical covenants (pp. 85-86). 
Taken together, the Letters recapitulate all of Covenant history, 
from Adam to Christ (pp. 86-89); and they also foreshadow the 
entire structure of Revelation (pp. 89-91). The Seven Seals set 
forth the period of the Last Days in general (p. 181); the Seven 
Trumpets warn of the Tribulation, up to the first Siege of Jeru- 
salem under Cestius (pp. 252-53, 286); and the Seven Chalices 
reveal the final outpouring of God's wrath upon Jerusalem and 
the Temple in A.D. 67-70 (pp. 383-84). 

Revelation is written to comfort and instruct the churches 
that are plagued and oppressed by an occult, gnostic, statist form 
of apostate Judaism which had captured the religious hierarchy 
of Israel (pp. 94, 106-07, 115-16). St. John calls this movement var- 
ious symbolic names — "Nicolaitans,""Balaamites,""Jezebelites," 

and "the Synagogue of Satan" — but all these expressions refer 
to the same cult (pp. 98, 101-03, 107-08, 113-14, 127-28). 

The meaning of the main symbols in Revelation maybe sum- 
marized as follows: 

The Seven-Sealed Book is the New Covenant, which Christ 
obtained at His glorious Ascension and "(opened" during the 
period of the Last Days, climaxing in the destruction of Jeru- 

582 



THE LESSONS OF REVELATION 

Salem (pp. 166-77). (The "Little Book," which explains the 
Seven-Sealed Book, is the Revelation to St. J ohn: p. 268.) The 
sealed multitude of 144,000 are the Remnant, the believing J ews 
of the first century (pp. 206-8, 355-59), the core of the innum- 
erable multitude of the redeemed from every nation (pp. 213-16). 
The "Two Witnesses" represent the faithful Church of the Old 
Covenant, "the law and the prophets" exemplified in Moses and 
Elijah, culminating in the witness-bearing of John the Forerun- 
ner (pp. 276-85). The Woman clothed with the Sun is faithful 
Israel, the Mother of Christ (pp. 297-300). In spite of the Drag- 
on's wrath, the Messiah ascends to rule heaven and earth from 
the Throne (pp. 308-9). Christ's defeat of Satan in Hislife, 
death, and resurrection IS portrayed by Michael's offensive "war 
in heaven" against the Dragon (pp. 311-18). 

The Beast from the Sea is the Roman Empire, embodied in 
Nero Caesar (pp. 325-35); the Beast from the Land (also called 
the False Prophet) is Israel's religious leadership (pp. 336-44); 
and the Image of the Beast is the apostate Jewish Synagogue 

(pp. 339-44). Babylon, the Great Harlot-City, is old, apostate 
Jerusalem (pp. 362-63, 414-16, 421-43). The New Jerusalem, the 
pure Bride-City, is the Church (pp. 473-75, 545-46, 552-63), 
which celebrates her Marriage Supper with the Lamb in the 
Eucharist, the Communion Feast (pp. 475-78); then she follows 
her Lord, who, as the Word of God, conquers all nations by the 
Gospel (pp. 481-92). 

Satan was bound in Christ's First Advent and thus prevented 
from prematurely instigating the eschatological War (pp. 
499-508). The "Millennium" is Christ's Kingdom, which began 
at the Resurrection/Ascension and continues until the end of 
the world (pp. 494-98, 508-19). The "new heaven and earth" is a 
picture of salvation: brought in definitively by the finished work 
of Christ, developing progressively throughout the present age, 
and coming finally, in absolute fullness, at the consummation of 
all things (pp. 535-45). 

Old Covenant Israel 

All Biblical covenants were provisional re-creations, looking 
forward to the definitive New Creation: the New Covenant (pp. 
266-67). The meaning of Israel's history is the bearing of the 
Manchild, Jesus Christ (pp. 297-300). Old Covenant believers 

583 



CONCLUSION 

carried the Testimony of Christ (pp. 512-13). The war between 
the Seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent climaxed at 
the Cross and the Resurrection (pp. 307-8). Unbelieving Israel 
was excommunicated; and now the Gent iles are streaming in to 
the New Covenant (pp. 273-74). Israel will never have a cove- 
nants identit y apart from the Church (p. 269), for Old Covenant 
religion cannot be revivified; salvation is now only with Christ 
and the Church (pp. 448-49). 

Christ's Resurrection, Ascension, 
and New Covenant Kingdom 

The goal of Christ's Advent was His glorious Ascension to 
the heavenly Throne (p. 309) - His definitive "Coming in the 
Clouds" (pp. 64-67). By His Resurrection and Enthronement, 
He defeated the devil and destroyed his works (pp. 315-17, 
502-4), opening heaven to all believers (pp. 366-67). Having 
been inaugurated at His First Advent (p. 117), Christ is the Ruler 
of all the kings of the earth (pp. 62-64); H[is Kingdom has begun 
and is going on now (pp. 63-64, 68-69). 

Jesus Christ's definitive victory gives us progressive domin- 
ion (pp. 117-18, 178-79). His resurrection is the First Resurrec- 
tion, in which all believers share (pp. 104, 516-19). The Kingdom 
is the Age of Regeneration (pp. 509-10), the era to be character- 
ized by righteousness (pp. 543-45). All Christians are royal 
priests (pp. 64, 139, 508-9), ministering and reigning both in 
heaven and on earth (pp. 514-15). 

Christ's Ascension opened the New Covenant (pp. 169-74), 
the New Creation of heaven and earth - a description of both our 
present and future inheritance (pp. 538-M). The New Jerusalem 
is the Kingdom City, the Church: Christ's Bride now and forever 
(pp. 525, 545-46). As the Old Covenant was the era of (relative) 
Night, the New Covenant is the era of the Day, for the world 
moves eschatologically from Darkness to Light (pp. 570-73). The 
New Covenant is thus the promised "age to come" (p. 473). 

Orthodox Christians agree that Christ's Kingdom goes from 
His Ascension to the end of the world (pp. 493-94). Orthodox 
Christianity is both amillennialist and postmillennialist (pp. 
494-96): For, while Christianity has always been staunchly anti- 
revolutionary (p. 495), it has also been strongly optimistic re- 
garding the power of the Gospel to convert the nations of the 

584 



THE LESSONS OF REVELATION 

world (pp. 496-97). Orthodox Christianity is therefore not 
"pluralistic" with respect to the Kingdom, holding that all men, 
nations, and institutions must bow down before the Lord Jesus 
Christ, obeying His commands in every area of life and thought 
(p. 496). 

Judaism and the Fall of Jerusalem 

The foremost enemy of the Church in New Testament times 
was apostate Judaism (pp. 106-7). First-century Judaism was 
not simply a continuation of Old Covenant religion; rather, it 
was an apostate religion, denying both the Old Testament and 
the New Testament (pp. 101-2, 336-37), promoting the heresy 
of salvation through chaos (pp. 115-16), committing idolatry by 
substituting the creation for the Creator (pp. 255-56). Israel's re- 
jection of Christ corrupted the rest of the world (p. 458), turned 
God's blessings into curses (pp. 245-46), and led her into the 
slavery of occultism and statism (p. 465). Common Biblical 
metaphors for covenant-breaking are fornication and adultery; 
apostate Jerusalem is thus represented as the Great Harlot, the 
corrupter of the world (pp. 108-9, 114, 363-64, 421-31). Unbe- 
lieving Jews are therefore not God's chosen people (pp. 127-28). 

Israel's greater privilege meant greater responsibility, and 
thus greater judgment (p. 128). After the Gospel was preached 
to the whole world (pp. 361-62), God poured out the Great Trib- 
ulation of A.D. 67-70 upon apostate J erusalem and her Temple 
(p. 68), in direct response to the prayers of His Church (pp. 
238-39). The destruction of Jerusalem was the sign to Israel and 
the world that the Son of Man is now reigning in heaven (pp. 
286-87); and it was the necessary final act of ushering in the New 
Covenant (pp. 267-68). Christ brought in the Age of Righteous- 
ness after the fall of Jerusalem (p. 570); the salvation of the 
world came through Israel's fall (pp. 241-42); indeed, Israel's fall 
will eventually result in her own conversion (p. 388). The only 
way of salvation, for Jews and Gentiles, is in Jesus Christ (p. 128). 

The Church 

There is only one Covenant of Grace, operating through 
different administrations (pp. 555-56). With the coming of the 
New Covenant, God's Glory was transferred from the Temple to 

585 



CONCLUSION 

the Church (pp. 552-53), and believing Jews and Gentiles united 
in one Body in Jesus Christ (p. 265). The Church is the True 
Israel (pp. 102-3, 152), the eschatological Synagogue (pp. 372, 
392); as such, she is no longer tied to the earthly Jerusalem but 
multicentralized throughout the world (p. 83). In the Old Cove- 
nant, the world had been organized around the Old Jerusalem; 
the Church is the New Jerusalem, the City of God (p. 131), and 
so now the world is organized around the Church (p. 416). We 
cannot have God for our Father if we do not have His Church 
for our Mother (p. 474). The sanctification of God's people is 
carried on by means of the Church, through her ministry and 
sacraments (pp. 292-93). 

The Church ascended to heaven with Christ (p. 284), and 
now "tabernacles" in heaven (pp. 318, 332), with the saints and 
angels (pp. 358-59). A saint is one who has sanctuary privileges; 
all Christians through the Ascension have access to the sanc- 
tuary (pp. 291-92). Christians and angels are now on an equal 
level as members of the heavenly Council (pp. 479-80): All 
Christians are prophets, seeing God face-to-face (p. 382). 

The Church is the definitive re-creation of the world, the New 
Covenant (p. 320); she is the City on the Hill, the Light of the 
world (pp. 562-63). Salvation will flow out from her gates to con- 
vert the world (pp. 566-67). All nations will stream into her with 
the fruits of their culture (pp. 561-62); indeed, rulers have the 
duty to support the Church (p. 563). When states forsake their re- 
sponsibility and seek to destroy the Church instead, such persecu- 
tion is never merely "political"; it is always religious (pp. 279-80). 
Satan's persecution of the Church is not a sign of his power; 
rather, he attacks the Church precisely because Jesus Christ has 
already defeated him (p. 319). Therefore, the Church will be pre- 
served through all her tribulations, and will gloriously overcome 
all her opposition (p. 322). There is therefore no excuse for fail- 
ure: Christ condemns churches that are ineffective (pp. 134-35). 

The heavenly Temple, the archetype for Israel's Tabernacle 
and Temple (pp. 150-51), has been inherited by the Church (pp. 
272-74). Since God's will is to be performed on earth as it is in 
heaven, angelic activity is the pattern for our own (pp. 153-54, 
557); in particular, the angels correspond to the pastors/bishops 
of the Church, and their judging/ruling activities are to be im- 
itated by their earthly counterparts (pp. 81, 230-31, 361-62, 364). 

586 



THE LESSONS OF REVELATION 

Worship 

The New Covenant inevitably resulted in a New Song: the 
New Covenant Liturgy (pp. 176-77). (The anti-liturgical bias is 
essentially pagan and Moslem in character, not Biblical: pp. 
24-25). The Christian day of worship, "the Lord's Day," is the 
liturgical acting-out of the Day of the Lord (pp. 70-71); this is 
why the Book of Revelation has historically set the pattern for 
the Church's worship (p. 24). Biblical worship is corporate, re- 
sponsorial, and orderly: This requires a formal liturgy (pp. 
162-64). Every week, on the Lord's Day, the worshiping Church 
follows Christ in His Ascension to heaven (pp. 147-48); angels 
are present in our worship because the Church is standing in the 
Court of heaven (p. 231). Everything we do in worship has cos- 
mic significance: According to the Scriptural pattern, our public 
prayer should be performed in a reverent physical posture (p. 
219); and even our simple Amen is regarded as a legal oath (pp. 
132-33). Because of the Ascension, all Christians are prophets, 
members of God's Advisory Council (pp. 148-49). The faithful 
Church prays imprecatory prayers against her oppressors (pp. 
194-95), and God brings judgments on the earth in response to 
the Church's cries "for justice (pp. 232-33). 

Worship must be centered on Jesus Christ. This means the 
weekly celebration of the Eucharist, the heart of Christian wor- 
ship (pp. 137-39, 476-77). The Eucharist is the center of life, and 
should give "shape" to everything else we do (P. 478). 

Dominion 

The Dominion Mandate, the task God assigned Adam, will 
be fulfilled by the triumph of the Gospel throughout the world 
(pP. 510-11). Christians rule with Christ in His Kingdom now, in 
this age (pp. 64, 68-69, 139, 508-11, 514-15), and Christianity is 
destined to take over all the kingdoms of the earth (pp. 287-88). 
God has given His people a "covenant grant" to take possession 
and exercise dominion over His creation (p. 85). All Christians 
are therefore commanded to overcome opposition; and, in fact, 
all Christians are overcomes (pp. 98-99). Political power, how- 
ever, does not come first; the temptation to grasp it prematurely 
must be resisted (pp. 511-12). The Church is to take the initiative 
in fighting against the forces of evil — she must attack, and not 

587 



CONCLUSION 

merely defend — and she will be successful (pp. 313-14). She must 
pray for, expect, and rejoice in her enemies' defeat (p. 459). God 
will give His Church enough time to accomplish her assignment 
(p. 506). 

The Conversion of the World 

For the most part, the world is still pre-Christian, not post- 
Christian (p. 57). J esus Christ came to save the world (pp. 
213-15), and His Resurrection and Ascension guarantee the 
triumph of the Gospel (p. 216). Christ is destined to smite and 
conquer all nations by His Word (pp. 481-92). His Cross, the 
Tree of Life, will heal all nations (pp. 567-69), as the Feast of 
Tabernacles symbolically sets forth (pp. 221-24). The over- 
whelming majority of people will be saved (pp. 387-88), and 
even Israel's fall will eventually result in her conversion (p. 388). 
The tendency in the New Covenant age is judgment unto salva- 
tion (p. 285). 

Salvation and the Christian Life 
The "age of accountability" doctrine is a myth; all men are 
accountable to God at every moment of their existence (pp. 
124-25). From one perspective, the Book of Life is a baptismal- 
roll, a Covenant record-book from which apostates are erased 
(p. 125); from another perspective, however, it is the member- 
ship roll of those whom God has chosen from before the foun- 
dation of the world (p. 334). The Bible t caches perseverance, 
not "eternal security" (pp. 69-70). Perseverance requires faith in 
God's righteous government of the world (p. 335). 

The Bible does not teach salvation bv works, but it does 
teach damnation by works. We are justified by faith alone; but 
true faith is never alone (p. 533). Wealth is a by-product of 
God's Kingdom; the pursuit of it apart from Christ is idolatry 
(Pp. 559-60). Christianity does not exempt us from suffering, 
but enables us to overcome it (pp. 220-21). Suffering does not 
produce godliness; only God's grace does (p. 407). Our suffer- 
ings serve one of two purposes: they either prove us or they im- 
rove us (pp. 236-37). God is more than willing to answer our 
prayers; our problem is that we don't pray (pp. 249-50). God has 
His secrets, but He has revealed what we need to know to obey 
Him (pp. 262-64). 

588 



THE LESSONS OF REVELATION 

Salvation is God'svictory over His enemies, in this world 
and the next (p. 386). Salvation redeems both the individual and 
the community in the City of God (p. 547). All life and culture 
flow from a religious center (p. 448). Christianity applies to 
every area of life; it renovates the world (p. 548). 

God and His World 

In the most absolute sense, God is independent of His crea- 
tion (pp. 160-62). The unity and diversity of the created order 
are reflections of the Trinity, in which unity and diversity are 
equally ultimate (pp. 58-59). God knows the future because He 
planned it (pp. 52-53). The meaning of predestination is that all 
facts are created facts, their meaning predetermined and wholly 
interpreted by God (p. 100). The opposite of predestination is 
not freedom but meaninglessness (p. 100). Although God is not 
responsible for sin, nothing happens outside His control (pp. 
441-42). 

Belief in autonomous "Natural Law" is the modern form of 
Baalism (pp. 156-58). Nothing in creation is autonomous; all 
things are personal and God-centered (p. 204). God rules His 
creation directly and personally (pp. 156-58). The very order of 
the constellations manifests the glory of God (pp. 158-60). God 
is King of the nations, and uses them to fulfill His purposes (P. 
387); He rules even the heathen armies of the earth (p. 409). The 
world's judgments proceed, directly and personally, from His 
Throne (p. 192). God imposes restraints on man's wickedness; 
without these there would be no limit to hatred and warfare (pp. 
188-89). God applies His standards of justice to the world, re- 
quiring multiple restitution (p. 450). 

Last Things 

The devil is not his own master; in the final analysis, he is 
governed by Christ (pp. 507-8). When God chooses to release 
him, Satan will bring the final War at the end of history (pp. 
519-25), but this last rebellion will be crushed immediately (pp. 
525-26). Both sides, the righteous and the wicked, will mature 
up to the very end; this is called epistemological self-conscious- 
ness (pp. 527-28). 

Orthodox Christianity has always held to a future Second 
Coming of Christ and God's final J udgment of the world (pp. 

589 



CONCLUSION 

263-64, 530-31). The Bible does not teach an absolute universal- 
ism; some people will never be converted and will perish ever- 
lastingly (p. 519). All those outside of Christ will be cast into 
eternal punishment (p. 534). 

God is the great Warrior- King: He defeats His enemies, and 
uses the spoils of victory to build His Temple (pp. 535-36). The 
Dominion Mandate will be fulfilled, and earth will be com- 
pletely "heavenized" (pp. 537-38). Salvation abolishes the Curse 
(pp. 569-70), and promises not only that Paradise will be re- 
stored, but that it will be utterly consummated (pp. 354-55): 
Our gain in Christ is much more than what we lost in Adam (p. 
567). Christians will reign with Christ, not just for a "millen- 
nium," but forever (p. 573). 

CHRISTUS VINCIT 
CHRISTUS REGNAT 
CHRISTUS IMPERAT 



590 



APPENDIXES 



Appendix A 
THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

Philip Barrington 



The liturgical character of sections in Revelation has often been 
pointed out; but I have seen no attempt to study and elucidate the 
liturgical scaffolding into which the visions are built. Archbishop Ben- 
son came very near to it when he treated the book as a drama, and 
printed it so as to display the choric structure. But Revelation is not a 
drama; it is a liturgy. A drama deals with the unfolding of personality, 
and the actors in it must use their own personalities to interpret it. In 
liturgy the hierophants must submerge their personalities and identi- 
ties in the movement of the whole composition. It is a real literary 
triumph that a sustained poem like Revelation should grip the atten- 
tion as it does without the assistance of human interest in character; 
and that triumph is liturgical in character. 

The author of the Revelation frequented the temple and loved its 
liturgy; when he shut his eyes in Ephesus, he could see the priests 
going about their appointed tasks at the great altar of burnt-offering. 
That vision forms the background of the whole poem. 

I am astonished to find so few discussions on the temple ritual, not 
only in connection with the Revelation, but also in connection with the 
Palestinian background of the New Testament generally. The recent 
advance in this study has concerned itself with the eschatological liter- 
ature, and the oral teaching of the Rabbis; it has neglected the temple, 
its priesthood, and worship. But in the New Testament period the tem- 
ple system was central; after its destruction the Rabbis organized a 
new Judaism on enlightened Pharisee lines. But it was a new religion, 
not the old. The old religion died in the year A.D. 70, and gave birth to 



Reprinted from Philip Barrington, The Meaning of the Revelation (Lon- 
don: SPCK, 1931). I cannot recommend all of Barrington's opinions - for in- 
stance his ridiculous JEDP-style "documentary hypothesis" of Revelation's 
authorship, and his views on the supposed evolution and late date of the text - 
but I believe that his overall contribution to our understanding of St. John's 
meaning is very valuable and more than compensates for his shortcomings. In- 
stead of registering my disagreement every time Barrington makes an objection- 
able statement, I shall take the risk of expecting the reader to think for himself. 

593 



APPENDIX A 

two children; the elder was modern Judaism without temple or priest 
or sacrifice; the younger was Christianity, which was proud of possess- 
ing all three. 

What links Hebrews with Revelation is its insistence on this fact. 
Christianity is the true heir of the old faith. To it have been transferred 
the priesthood and the sacrifice. 

The New Universal Worship 

When St. John came to the work of publishing his visions twenty 
years after Jerusalem had fallen, one of his main tasks was to provide 
a scheme or pattern for Christian worship. There can be no doubt that 
he set himself to do this consciously and deliberately; what is more, he 
was successful. The "Anaphora," as the consecration prayer of the 
Eucharist is called in the East, follows the pattern he laid down. The 
"Canon" of the Roman Mass and the Consecration Prayer of the Eng- 
lish Prayer Book do so, though less faithfully. 

It seems reasonable to suppose that his liturgical work was not 
done at random or in a spirit of theory. It must have borne some sort 
of relation to the way Christian worship was actually conducted at the 
time; analogy suggests that if the older part of the book reflected the 
worship of the old religion that had passed away, the newer part would 
reflect that of the new religion which had taken its place. Now the 
opening chapters 4 and 5, though they belong to the later period of St. 
John's inspiration, do seem to be built upon a foundation of older 
work, in which the following changes appear to have been made: (1) a 
Throne takes the place of an Altar, and (2) Twenty-four Elders on 
Thrones are added. (See Charles, ad. loc.) But these changes corre- 
spond to the picture of the Christian congregation of the period sug- 
gested in the writings of St. Ignatius (see Rawlinson in Foundations, 
on "The Origins of the Christian Ministry"). The Throne of God rep- 
resents the chair of the bishop, and around him are grouped the 
Elders. The number is chosen because of the Twenty-four courses into 
which the Hebrew Priesthood (and even the Levites and people) had 
been divided; we may compare the picture of the High Priest Simon in 

Ecclesiastics 1 with his "garland" of priests. 

We may therefore feel some confidence that we have before us the 
actual arrangements of the Christian liturgy, which was in its turn 
dependent on Hebrew origins. 

I have dealt in the text with the parallelisms between the Four Zoa 
[living creatures], the Seven Lamps, the Glassy Sea, etc., and the Cher- 
ubim, Candlestick, and Laver of the Temple. In St. John they are vari- 
ously applied to the universal worship of all creation. This universal 
worship finds expression in the Sanctus (Holy, Holy, Holy), which is 

594 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

also used in the morning prayers of the synagogue, where it is associ- 
ated with the thought of creation; in the Revelation the praise of God 
for his creation is uttered by the Elders, who prostrate themselves ?t 
the sound of the SanctUS, 

This is the "first movement" of the Anaphora, of the Christian 
Eucharist, in which men "join with angels and archangels and all the 
company of heaven." Most of the Greek liturgies show traces of the 
"Axios" or "Axion" (worthy) of Revelation; at rather a long remove it 
is reflected in "It is meet and right (justumet dignum) SO to do." 

The Revelation of St. John then proceeds to show us the Lamb as 
it had been slain for Sacrifice; and the Christian liturgies follow him 
by narrating the life and death of Christ, and so leading up to the con- 
secration and offering. The word Standing, which is applied to the 
Lamb, is a translation of Tamid, the technical name for the lamb 
which was offered every morning in the temple as a whole burnt-offer- 
ing. It was the "standing offering." 

This is followed by the offering of Incense, which stands for inter- 
cessory prayer; and then comes a New Song. The New Song was also 
mentioned in a hymn used in the temple after the killing of the lamb, 
and before the Incense. I shall refer to it later. 

The liturgy ends with praise to God and the Lamb, and the singing 
of the Amen, which was characteristic of the Eucharist at this point. 
All the liturgies follow this outline, and it is from this point onwards 
that they vary. The first two parts of the Te Deum follow the same lines 
of construction. 

We now turn to chapter 7, verses 9 to 17, a short passage which is 
also the work of the latest period, anticipating the end of the book. It 
represents the worship of the Martyrs in heaven. 

The thought of martyrdom as sacrifice is as early as the Maccabean 
period, and has behind it Isaiah 53. The man who gives his life for 
God or country is both priest and victim; he offers, but what he offers 
is himself. In Revelation his priesthood is dependent upon that of 
Christ. 

In chapter 1 Christ has been shown as priest and King. He is wear- 
ing the long white robe and the girdle at the breast; he stands "in the 
midst of the seven lamps; that is to say, he is in the sanctuary where 
the seven-branched candlestick is, and robed like a priest. This plain 
linen was worn by the high priest on the Day of Atonement. At the 
end of Revelation the same figure comes out of the sanctuary with the 
same robe splashed with blood. 

The martyrs also wear white robes, which are connected with that 
of Christ by the statement that they are washed in the blood of the 
lamb; the same mixed character of priest and victim belongs both to 

595 



APPENDIX A 

the martyrs and their lord; but their deaths are lifted to the level of 
sacrifice by association with his. 

The martyrs offered their bodies, and more than their bodies: their 
lives, their courage, their patient endurance; this is the living sacrifice 
of Remans 12, holy, acceptable, your logical warship. Giving the word 
body this wide sense, we may well agree that the white robes mean all 
that the martyrs offered to God, purified now in the blood of the per- 
fect sacrifice. 

Later on the white robes are called fine linen, which is priestly 
material. 

In the text of the book I have compared the palms and the hosanna 
(Salvation) to the triumphal entry of Christ into Jerusalem, his going 
up to be sacrificed. This is only part of a wider comparison. Both are 
connected with the ritual of the Feast of Tabernacles, which occurred 
at the time of Ingathering, when the vintage and all the other harvests 
were in. In this festival priests encircled the altar waving palms and 
singing Hosanna; here the martyr-priests are in the sanctuary waving 
palms and singing hosanna round the throne which has taken the place 
of the altar. 

The thought of Tabernacles is carried further in the statement that 
God will Tabernacle upon them; they are themselves to be his Taber- 
nacle or dwelling-place. 

We turn to the end of the book for the fourth and last section deal- 
ing with Christian worship. In 21:3 the last statement is taken up 
again. It is, strange to say, a quotation from Leviticus, where it implies 
that the holy God will dwell among a holy people. Here it is widened 
to mean that men generally make up the sanctuary of God; his Taber- 
nacling is with them. The noun and verb 'Tabernacle" are connected 
with the Hebrew Shekinah, the visible glory of God which is said to 
have filled the tabernacle in the desert and the temple when Solomon 
consecrated it. St. J ohn is announcing, therefore, that the old local 
sanctuary is gone, and henceforth the Presence is with men in general, 
and God is making himself visible in and through them. 

The thought is developed in the Epilogue which begins with verse 
9. It is first repeated in the language of symbolism. The holy city has 
the Glory of God; its lustre is like the J asper Stone; in chapter 4 God 
was said to be like the J asper Stone, so that all this only repeats the 
previous statement about the Tabernacling. God's "visible" Presence is 
in this city. It replaces the old temple. The whole cit y is filled with the 
Presence, not merely a sacred part of it. Even its foundation is J asper 
-that is to say, divine. 

The precious stones built into its walls mean the elect souls in 
which God dwells; the twelve foundations being the apostles of the 

596 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

lamb. The clear bright gold of its streets means that God's tabernacle 
is built out of the pure in heart; this symbolism corresponds to that of 
the white robes. 

There was no sanctuary in it; that is to say, the Presence is not 
localised. There is no alternation of light and dark upon it; no need to 
calculate suns and moons; it lives in the perpetual light of the Pres- 
ence. No seven-branched lamp needs to be kindled to burn through 
the night; the Lamb is the lamp. 

Through the lives of the elect souls in which God dwells the light 
shall shine into the world. The community of the elect is wide open; its 
gates are never shut. It has no national distinctions. The kings of the 
earth bring their glory into it; a reference to the sacrifices offered by 
Roman emperors and others at J erusalem. The honour they gave to 
that sanctuary shall come to this. Free to all shall be the waters and 
fruits of the spiritual paradise. 

No hereditary and monopolist priesthood shall have sole posses- 
sion of this sanctuary and mediate between God and his people. All his 
servants shall stand in his presence, and every one of them shall belike 
the high priest, and have his name on their foreheads. Open universal 
vision: open universal priesthood. 

This epilogue builds up a picture of the Catholic church in which it 
is contrasted at every point with the old J ewish temple, and shown to 
be more glorious because every part of it is filled with the illumination 
of the Presence which had been confined to the Holy of Holies. St. 
J ohn deliberately avoids all the ornaments of temple worship - white 
robes, golden girdles, harps, incense, altar; they are all gone. Note 
also its square shape, its gates, and its living waters, which are all 
taken from Ezekiel's temple. 

The Temple Sacrifice 

We have gone through the later additions to St. John's poem and 
seen how illuminating it is to test them from the liturgical point of 
view; we now turn to the older visions which are preserved within this 
scaffolding. 

Chapters 1 to 5 are new material which forms an introduction to 
this older system; and no doubt older elements are to be found in 
them. I have pointed out already how the High Priest is to be seen in 
the vision of Christ in chapter 1, the sanctuary and its ornaments in 
chapter 4, and the slain lamb in chapter 5. 

Let me now outline the course of the daily burnt-offering at the 
temple; it may be divided as follows: 

597 



APPENDIX A 

1. The killing of the lamb. 

2. The preparation of the offerings. 

3. Interval for prayer. 

4. Offering of Incense. 

5. The burning of the offering. 

6. Psalms, etc. The "shout." 

7. Feasting on the sacrifice: if a sin-offering. 

1. The Killing of the Lamb. - Four events took place simultan- 
eously: the trumpet was blown three times, and the gates of the temple 
and the gates of the sanctuary were opened; at the same moment the 
lamb was killed and its blood dashed against the altar. 

Of necessity St. J ohn must begin with the lamb killed, as he wishes 
to work it into the Christian scheme of worship which he has prefixed 
to his older series of visions; v. 6 is therefore the culmination of one 
and the opening of the other. Z saw a lamb standing as sacrificed. I 
have already pointed out that the word "standing" is a literal transla- 
tion of Tamid, the technical name for the morning burnt-offering. The 
verse should therefore be translated, "I saw the lamb of the Tamid as 
slain." The expression recurs in 14:1. 

(A "New Song" is sung by the Twenty-four Elders, who now have 
harps and incense as priests; but this has to do with the Christian 
scheme, which overlaps at this point. The "New Song" in the temple 
came a little later; and St. John has deferred it till 14:3.) 

Passing over the non-liturgical episode of the Four Horsemen, we 
come to the souls under the altar (6:9). Immediately after the lamb 
was killed its blood was splashed on to the altar; there is a strong con- 
nection in Hebrew thought between blood and soul, and the souls here 
are described as the souls of the sacrificed. They pray also for ven- 
geance on their blood. The blood is thought of as poured on the 
ground; the blood-soul is thought of as gcing up to Jehovah. The 
same thought ultimately underlies the blood sacrifice and blood ven- 
geance. We see that already the deaths of the innocent dead are associ- 
ated with the death of the Lamb; perhaps they are thought of as 
cleansed by his blood, for they are given a w bite robe (see above). 

Passing over the sixth seal and the later Christian liturgical passage 
which has been linked to it, we come to the trumpets and the incense 
offering (8:1). The incense offering appears to be out of its place, and 
we will neglect it for the moment, noting, however, the feeling of St. 
John for correct and beautiful ceremonial. One of the beauties of cere- 
monial is simultaneous action designed to prevent delay while prepa- 
rations are being made. 

598 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

1. Seven angels are given seven trumpets. 

2. The Incense is offered. 

3. The trumpets are sounded. 

The same particularity is shown in the case of the seven bowls (see 
15:1). 

Let us return to the killing of the lamb. The signal for the killing of 
the lamb was three blasts on the trumpet; these three blasts were also a 
signal for the gates of the temple and sanctuary to be opened. This is 
what we find in St. John: 

Seven Trumpets (8:1 to 11:18). 

Opening of the Sanctuary of God in Heaven (11:19). 

We are justified in concluding, therefore, that he is following, 
though in a rough manner, the temple ceremonial. The likeness be- 
comes more exact when we recollect that Dr. Charles has given very 
good reason to suppose that in Revelation also the number of trum- 
pets was originally three. The argument from ceremonial converts Dr. 
Charles' hypothesis into a certainty. The series of seven seals and seven 
trumpets as I have observed in the text of my book, is not a key to the 
construction of Revelation; it obscures it; it was introduced to bind to- 
gether visions that did not cohere. 

In dealing with the Naos or Sanctuary in Heaven, we are on very 
delicate ground. Two things seem clear. One is that the "visible" Pres- 
ence or Glory is departed from J erusalem so that the Naos there is a 
Naos no longer; the other is that the Naos in heaven is the number of 
elect believers in which the Presence is henceforth to Tabernacle. It is 
universal, in the "heavens," open to all. I believe that the older series 
of visions was to have ended, or perhaps did end, with the descent of 
this Temple not made with hands. Two traces of it, I think, are to be 
found: the promise in 3:12, / will make him a pillar in the Naos of my 
God, and the statement about the triumphant martyrs, 7:15, They 
serve him day and night in his Naos. 

This thought of the new Naos from heaven was superseded by 
something better, the vision of the New City which has no Naos, and 
no day or night either. 

Now we see why the death of the lamb had to come first. It was the 
death of Christ that opened the way. When thou hadst overcome the 
sharpness of death, thou didst open the Kingdom of heaven to all be- 
lievers. Comparing St. John with the temple ritual, we now get: 

599 



APPENDIX A 

Temple. Simultaneous. St. John. 

Three trumpets. Lamb killed. 

Lamb killed. Blood on altar. 

Blood splashed on altar. Three trumpets. 

Gates opened. Gates opened. 

The Incense Offering (Rev. 8:3-5) 

Why, then, is the incense offering put in its wrong place? 

There are one or two suggestions which can be made on this point. 
The first is a literary point of some importance. St. John is following 
out several complicated systems in this book, and the logical order of 
one sometimes has to give way to another. I have shown how faithfully 
the order of Revelation follows the book of Ezekiel; now this passage 
is based on a vision of Ezekiel' s which comes at this point. If he re- 
mains true to Ezekiel it must immediately succeed the vision of the 
sealing. 

Further, there was one day of the year when the offering of incense 
did come earlier; and this day was the Day of Atonement, the only day 
when the high priest was bound to officiate in person. We shall find 
other reasons for supposing that St. John has the Day of Atonement 
in mind. We have had one already. The high priest (Christ) has been 
shown to us in chapter 1 wearing a white vestment, and the only day 
the high priest wore white was the Day of Atonement. 

If this suggestion is true, St. John has not confined himself to the 
ceremonial of one t ype of sacrifice only. His ceremonial is conflate. We 
may note that he could not have used the Day of Atonement ceremon- 
ial only, as he would then have had to have symbolised Christ by a 
goat. 

The ceremony described by St. J ohn seems to be based on the daily 
ritual, as it is done by an angel, not by Christ the high priest; but pos- 
sibly this need not be pressed, as the angel symbolises the whole proc- 
ess of intercession. The half-hour's silence which preceded the incense 
offering corresponds to the silence and prostration which followed it 
in the temple system. We may note that in the daily ritual theNaos was 
entered at this point, and the incense altar cleansed; the heavenly Naos 
would not need this. On the other hand, when we come to the point 
where the incense offering took place in the daily ritual, we find that 
St. J ohn has a very significant passage corresponding to it. 

To sum up. St. J ohn desired at this spot to symbolise the prayers of 
the innocent dead coming before God and being answered. He there- 
fore moves the incense offering to this point, as on the Day of Atone- 
ment. He thus preserves his parallelism with Ezekiel. 

600 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

A long non-liturgical passage follows. The three trumpets are made 
to symbolise the voice of prophecy in its denunciation of sin. Length- 
ened to seven, they recall the fall of the city of J ericho (8:6 to 9:21). 

Then comes the completion and fulfillment of the prophetic minis- 
try in the Christian evangel, in connection with which he relates his 
own call, and his peculiar and distinctive work which is to prophesy 
against J erusalem. J erusalem is to be destroyed; the Naos only is to be 
preserved; and by the Naos we have seen that he means the community 
of elect souls in which the Presence of God is Tabernacling. The real 
Israel is now the Christian church (10:1 to 11:13). 

All this is concluded by the last trumpet and the opening of the 
heavenly Naos (11:14-19). 

The Great Interlude is also non-liturgical. It narrates the appear- 
ance of the Deliverer, his victory over Satan, the persecution of his fol- 
lowers in J erusalem, and the appearance of the beast (the Roman god- 
emperor system) which persecutes his followers abroad (12 and 13). 

2. The Preparation of the Sacrifice.- After the lamb had been 
killed and its blood splashed on the altar there was still much to be 
done. It had to be skinned and cut into pieces; its entrails and legs 
were washed in thelaver;and it was laid out on the slope that led up to 
the altar. The priests then went to the Hall of Polished Stones for 
Prayers. 

Chapter 14 opens with the lamb standing on the Mount Sion,or 
rather the lamb of the Tamid on Mount Sion. As Mount Sion is the 
site of the temple, I need not labour the sacrificial aspect of this verse. 

With him are the hundred and forty and four thousand who were 
"sealed"; they have the name of his father written on their foreheads. 
These are the martyrs, who, together with the lamb, form the sacrifice. 
They are also priests. The high priest carried on his forehead a golden 
plate, the petalon, bearing the sacred name of J ehovah, Holiness unto 
the Lord. In verse 4 they are described as "firstfruits," a definitely sac- 
rificial term; and in verse 5 they are said to be "without blemish"; a 
perfect material for sacrifice. 

I have dealt in the text with the statement in verse 4 that they were 
not defiled with women. The priests at the sacrifice had to observe cer- 
tain ceremonial taboos which kept them technically "holy"; among 
these was abstinence from intercourse with women. 

Then follows the New Song, sung not in the Hall of Polished 
Stone, but before the Throne; but I shall deal with this later. 

After the three woes which are non-liturgical, we find the coming 
of one like a son of man upon a white cloud, followed by the harvest 
and vintage of the land. These are Stongly liturgical in tone. Let us set 
it out liturgically. 

601 



APPENDIX A 

And I looked and 10 a White Cloud, and upon the Cloud one 
Seated like a Son of Man, having upon his head a Golden crown and 
in his hand a sharp Sickle. 

And another Angel came out of the Naos, crying in a loud voice to 
the one Seated on the Cloud, 

Send thy Sickle and reap: for the hour is come to reap; for the 
Harvest of the Landis dried up. 

And the one Seated on the Cloud put his Sickle to the Land and the 
Land was reaped. 

And another Angel came out of the Naos in Heaven also having a 
sharp Sickle. 

And another Angel came out of the Altar who had charge of the 
Fire and said with a loud voice to the one that had the Sickle, saying 

Send thy sharp Sickle and cut the clusters of the Vine of the Land; 
for its Grapes are full-ripe. 

And the Angel put his Sickle into the Land, and cut the Vine of the 
Land, and put it into the Great Winepress of the wrath of God. 

And the Winepress was trodden outside the City, and there came 
out Blood from the Winepress. 

The liturgical form and tone of this section are obvious, and invite 
closer study than we were able to give it in the text of the book. It is a 
very complicated passage. 

1. Its primary reference is to Mark 13:26, which speaks: (a) of the 
Son of Man coming on the Clouds, (&) of his sending his Angels to 
gather the elect into his kingdom, and (c) of the sun darkened, etc., by 
which is meant the fall of J erusalem. 

2. The meaning of a resurrection of the just is impossible as the 
passage stands, though it may have meant that in an early recension of 
the poem. As it stands it means the separation of the elect, and their 
escape from the doom of J erusalem. 

3. There is a reference to the J ewish Calendar and the system of 
feasts observed at the Temple: (a) Passover at the beginning of the 
year, marking the beginning of harvest, and (b) Tabernacles or Ingath- 
ering at the end of the year, marked by the vintage. This allusion 
relates the vision to our previous supposition that the early recension J 
ended with symbolism based on Tabernacles. 14:1 ff. would have fol- 
lowed this vision. 

4. The liturgical form suggests that it may be based on the ritual of 
gathering in the harvest. Now the cutting of the first sheaf was itself a 
ritual, known as the Omer of Firstfruit. It occurred on Nisan 15, the 
"high day" of John 19:31, and as it was done at night it was contem- 
poraneous with the resurrection. 

602 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

Nisan 14. Lamb killed. Crucifixion. 

Passover eaten. Burial. 
15. High day. 

Firstfruit cut. Resurrection. 

In the year of the crucifixion it chanced that Nisan 15 was also a 
sabbath; but this was, of course, a coincidence. I have dated the cruxi- 
fixion, etc., as in the fourth gospel, which I take to be correct; but in 
any case the references in Revelation are to the crucifixion story as 
related in that gospel. 

5. Lightfoot in his account of the Temple and its services gives an 
outline of the ritual for the Omer. 

'Those that the Sanhedrin sent about it went out at the evening of 
the Holy Day (the first day of the Passover Week); they took baskets 
and sickles, etc. 

'They went out on the Holy Day when it began to be dark, and a 
great company went out with them; when it was now dark, one said to 
them, 

"On this Sabbath, On this Sabbath, On this Sabbath. 

"In this Basket, In this Basket, In this Basket. 

"Rabbi Eliezer the son of Zadok saith, With this Sickle, .With this 
Sickle, With this Sickle, every particular three times over, 

"And they answer him, Well, Well, Well; and he bids them reap." 

This is not perhaps on first sight as close a parallel as one might 
have desired to the passage we are discussing; but there are points of 
likeness: (a) There was a dialogue which took place at the beginning of 
harvest, (b) It explicitly mentions the time: This Sabbath=The Hour 
is come, (c) It explicitly mentions the Sickle, (d) The reaper is then 
commanded to do his work; but the words of this command are not 
given. The two dialogues are of the same character, have the same pur- 
pose, involve similar speakers, and have points of resemblance; we 
could not expect much more. 

(The word Sabbath demands a note. I think I am right in saying 
that Nisan 15, though not necessarily a Sabbath, might be called a 
Sabbath, because it was in every respect equal to a Sabbath and ob- 
served in the same way. The breach of the Sabbath involved in cutting 
the first sheaf was excused.) 

6. A further very interesting parallel is afforded by the stage we 
have now reached in the Tamid, or daily offering. To the pieces of the 
lamb were added (a) the meal offering of fine flour, and (b) the daily 
offering of the high priest, which consisted of bread and wine. The 
Son of Man is, of course, the Christian high priest; the wheat harvest 
and the vintage afford some parallel to the bread and wine. The con- 

603 



APPENDIX A 

nection, which seems rather fanciful, will amount to a certainty if we 
accept the relation proposed in the text of the book between the cut- 
ting of the Vine of the land and the murder of the high priest Ananus; 
for this provides a second point of contact with the thought of the 
high priest. 

To a poet of St. John's type, the thought of the high priest's offer- 
ing of bread and wine would prove a basis for rich and complex sym- 
bolism, (a) Considering the crucifixion, there is the thought of the high 
priest Jesus offering himself on Calvary, and antithetically the thought 
that his offering was the work of the official high priest Caiaphas; and 
linked with this the institution of the sacrament of bread and wine the 
night before the crucifixion, (b) Taking the murder of Ananus as the 
starting point of the ruin of J erusalem, there is the thought of the offi- 
cial high priest lying dead, sacrificed, as J osephus describes it, in the 
courts of the temple itself; a vengeance of blood. 

7. The Winepress imagery makes clear the blood-vengeance sym- 
bolism, and suggests at once the Edomites who murdered Ananus. 

The words "outside the City" are the link with the crucifixion, and 
provide a connection with the sin-offering when it was offered for the 
high priest or for the whole nation, as in the special case of the Day of 
Atonement; for it was then that the body of the victim was taken out- 
side the city to be burned. (Note: the Day of Atonement follows the 
festival of Ingathering.) 

The parallelisms in the second section may therefore be summar- 
ised as follows: 

Temple. St. John. 

Preparation of Lamb. 

Pieces laid on slope of altar. Lamb of theTamid on Mount Sion. 
Meal offering. 

Offering of high priest. Appearance of Son of Man. 

Bread. Harvest. 

Wine. Vintage. 

Those with the Lamb in St. John may perhaps be compared to the 
numerous free-will offerings which accompanied the Tamid. 

3. Interval for Prayers, etc. -At this point in the temple ritual, 
when all was ready for the sacrifice, the priests retired to the Hall of 
Polished Stone for prayers, which included the Ten Commandments 
and Shema. Amongst them was a "G'ullah," which includes the fol- 
lowing verses in the form still used among the J ews: 

604 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

True and firm it is that thou art Jehovah: our God and the God of 
our fathers. 

Thy Name is from everlasting: and there is no God beside thee. 

A new song did they that were delivered: sing to thy Name by the 
sea shore. 

Together did all praise and own thee as king: and say Jehovah shall 
reign who bath redeemed Israel. 

We are not surprised, therefore, to find St. John introducing at this 
point the song of Moses the servant of God and of the Lamb. It is 
sung by the martyrs standing by the glassy sea in heaven, which now 
appears as if mingled with fire, a clear reference to the Red Sea of the 
Mosaic deliverance. St. J ohn's song is very like the temple ceremonial: 

Great and wonderful are thy works; Jehovah God of hosts. 

Just and true are thy ways; king of the world. 

Who shall not fear thee O Jehovah; and glorify thy Name? for 
thou only art holy. 

For all the nations shall come and worship before thee: for thy 
righteous acts have been shown forth. 

The "New Song" mentioned in the temple ritual is alluded to earlier 
in 14:3 by those who stand with the Lamb on Mount Sion; but this 
song is only known to those who sing it. The song at this point, how- 
ever, serves to identify them as priests as well as victims. 

A "New Song" has also been given to the twenty-four priestly 
elders who lead the Christian worship in chapter 5. This also follows 
the revelation of the Lamb of the Tamid as slain for sacrifice (5:9). 
"Worthy art thou to take the book . . . for thou wast slain for sacrifice 
and redeemed to God in thy blood, out of every tribe and tongue and 
people and nation, and hast made them a royal priesthood to God and 
they reign upon the earth. " 

It is impossible to say how much of this psalmody is based on the 
temple ritual, or how much it has influenced Christian liturgiology. 
May not the "True and firm" have suggested the "Meet and right?" 

A form of the True and Firm is still used in the Synagogue morning 
prayers. 

4. The Incense Offering. -The next section of the daily ritual of 
the temple was the offering of the incense at the golden altar inside the 
Naos. We have noted that St. J ohn has placed this piece of ceremonial 
earlier; but that has enabled him to place something far more signifi- 
cant here. 

Let us note first that he has arranged the ritual of the seven bowls 
exactly as he arranged the ritual of the seven trumpets. A comparison 
will suffice to show this: 

605 



APPENDIX A 

The Trumpets The Bowls 

The Trumpets given The Bowls ready 

Incense offered The Song of Moses and the Lamb 

The Trumpets sounded The Angels with Bowls appear 

The Smoke of the Glory 
The Bowls poured out 

I twill be noted that in the case of the bowls, to which we are now 
coming, the ritual is more elaborate, as the greater importance of the 
event warrants. They are, of course, the rea I answer to the prayers 
offered with the incense; the trumpets were warnings. 

The point we have now reached was the most solemn in the daily 
ritual. The priest with the incense went in with four assistants, who 
placed everything in readiness and then withdrew; the priest in charge 
of the incense, who was now alone in the Naos, threw the incense on 
the coals, and the Naos was filled with smoke.Then came the solemn 
silence for intercession, the people and priests outside prostrating 
themselves. This was the moment for prayer and answer to prayer. St. 
Luke gives an account of it in the first chapter of his gospel. 

In St. John we read that the Naos was filled with smoke from the 
Glory of God and his Power. As in the story of Solomon's dedication, 
the "visible" Presence of God appears in the temple, the outward signs 
which corresponded to the pillar of smoke by day and the pillar of fire 
by night in the temple. The Glory and the Power are both words which 
mean nothing else in Rabbinic Hebrew but God himself in his glory 
and power. After the incense and the trumpets in chapter 8 we read 
that the Naos appeared in heaven with the ark which was the outward 
sign of God's covenant; now the Naos is filled with the Shekinah. 

J ust as in the former case we saw some parallelism with the cere- 
monial of the Day of Atonement, so the same is to be found here: No 
one could enter into the Naos till the seven plagues of the seven angels 
were completed. On the Day of Atonement, once the high priest had 
entered the Naos, no one could enter it till he had finished his work. 

But in St. J ohn's ceremonies there is still no sign of the high priest. 
All is entrusted to angels; and the splendour of his coming is delayed. 

The Pouring of the Blood 

We now come to another point in which St. John deserts the order 
of the Tamid, which has no pouring of blood at this point; it has been 
done at the beginning. 

There are several reasons for this. 

St. John is bound to have two pourings of blood, because he is us- 
ing the symbolism of blood avenging; blood has been shed, and more 

606 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

blood must avenge it. 

It was at this point on the Day of Atonement that the High Priest 
came out, after cleansing the Naos and Holy of Holies, in order to 
smear blood upon the horns of the altar and cleanse that, following 
the custom in all sin-offerings. 

The offering on the Day of Atonement was a special version of the 
sin-offering, a sin-offering for the High Priest and for the whole na- 
tion; in such cases it was directed that the carcase should be taken and 
burnt "outside the Camp" - that is to say, in historic times, "outside 
the City." I have pointed out how our author and the author of the 
Epistle to the Hebrews have brought out the likeness between this 
custom and the crucifixion of our Lord "outside the city." 

In the sin-offering the whole of the remainder of the Blood was 
poured out at the foot of the altar; and this ceremony has provided the 
basis for what follows in Revelation. On the Day of Atonement the 
High Priest entered the Holy Place and sprinkled Blood Seven times 
towards the veil; he then came out with reconciliation and atonement 
for the people. Nothing of the sort occurs in Revelation, because there 
is no reconciliation. No High Priest appears. Only a "great voice" 
from within the Naos directs the seven angels to pour out their bowls, 
and the seven angels in "white stone" and golden girdles come out with 
a sevenfold libation to pour upon the land. It is to be presumed that in 
St. J ohn's thought the land that has been soaked in the blood of J esus 
and his martyrs is one great altar of burnt-and blood-offerings. 

It is a reversal of all values and expectations. There is no atone- 
ment, no reconciliation; what is to follow is rejection, retribution, and 
destruction. 

The blood-avenging symbolism recurs throughout the seven bowls. 
Under the second the sea becomes like the blood of a corpse. Under 
the third the rivers become blood, and a versicle and response follow: 

And I heard the voice of the Angel of the Waters saying, 

Righteous art thou, who art and who wast, the Holy; for thou hast 
judged these things. 

For the blood of saints and prophets they poured out; and blood 
thou hast given them to drink. 

They are worthy. 

And I heard the Altar saying, 
Yea, Jehovah God of hosts: true and just are thy judgments. 

I pointed out in the text of the book that the altar here signifies the 
martyrs, or their blood spilt on the land. 

When the seventh is poured out on the air, a Great Voice came out 
of the Naos from the Throne, saying, it is done . . . and Babylon the 
great was remembered before God to give her the cup of the wine of 

607 



APPENDIX A 

the anger of his wrath. Here too the liturgical tone cannot be missed. 
"Remembered before God" is a devotional phrase; and we shall recur 
to the cup. 

5. The Offerings Burnt. -The next stage in the daily ritual was the 
burning of all the offerings except the drink-offering, which was 
poured out at the foot of the altar. 

Babylon is priest as well as victim. Her fine linen is priestly. Her 
purple and gold and scarlet and blue are priestly. The fine linen recalls 
the stones of the temple gleaming white like snow. She is "gilded with 
gold," like the temple. There was in front of the door of the Naos a 
"Babylonian tapestry in which blue, purple, scarlet and linen were 
mingled with such skill that one could not 100 k on it without admira- 
tion," as J osephus tells us. 

The merchandise of 18:11, which critics say could never have come 
to a small town like J erusalem, would all have been used in building 
and furnishing the temple; the merchandise of these things must have 
employed many ships. And note the irony at the end, horses and char- 
iots and slaves, yes and the souls of men. 

The conjunction of the desert and the scarlet in 17:3 suggests the 
scapegoat. 

Her former lovers are to make her desolate and naked and eat her 
flesh, and burn her with fire, and the only excuse for this horrible sym- 
bolism is that it is drawn from the sin-offering. 

A verse of masterly irony is found in 18:5: Her sin-offerings have 
mounted up to heaven, and God has remembered her unrighteous- 
ness. Hattah in Hebrew means both sin and sin-offering; not till the 
last word of the line, when we read unrighteousness, is the meaning of 
the first apparent: it means sins. 

Babylon, falsely priestly, is herself the burnt-offering. It is another 
reversal of expectations. In fire shall she be burnt, When they see the 
Smoke of her burning; and finally when the shout of triumph goes up, 
Alleluia: for her Smoke goeth up forever and ever. She is turned into a 
continual burnt-offering. (Compare Lev. 6:13.) 

Nor is that the end. One ceremony remains. The high priest's cup 
of wine, the drink-offering, must be poured out. This too is not for- 
gotten, but it is turned into a communion. To give her the cup of the 
wine of the anger of his wrath for she is drunk with the blood of the 
saints and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus. Repay to her as she 
repaid; and double and redouble according to her works. So ends the 
blood avenging. In her was found the blood of prophets and saints 
and all who were slain for sacrifice upon the land (18 and 19). 

6. The Psalms. -After the drink-offering was poured out, came 
the psalms; there was a "shout"; there were trumpets; there were pros- 

608 



THE LEVITICAL SYMBOLISM IN REVELATION 

tration and silence; there was for the first time instrumental music. All 
this is reflected in the Alleluia chorus which goes up after the fall of 
Babylon. The detail of it need not detain us here, except that the Alle- 
luias recall the last psalms of the book; and that each chorus begins 
with Alleluia, though in one case it has been translated into "Praise 
our God" (19:1-10). 

7. The Feast on the Sacrifice.- Sin-offerings were followed by the 
eating of part of the sacrifice by the priest. Two feasts follow the 
psalmody here, one for God's friends, and one for his enemies. The 
first is the marriage feast of the lamb, with its obvious reference to the 
eucharist (19:9). The other is the invitation to the birds of heaven to 
feed on the flesh of those who fall in the wars of the messiah (19:17). 

The Hebrew part of the book has two further liturgical points in it 
before it closes: (1) The Coming Out of the Great High Priest (19:11) in 
which the liturgical symbolism is already gone; he comes out of 
heaven, not out of the Naos. The Naos in heaven seems to vanish with 
the earthly temple. I have dealt with the symbolism of this passage; 
but it is worth noting again the fine linen, and the priestly garment 
splashed with blood. One fine point is the name written on the thigh; I 
have given an explanation in the text, which I think is the central one. 
But it is worth noting that priestly sacredness attached to the thigh; it 
was a part of the sin-offering that went to the priest. I have seen med- 
ieval J ewish drawings with a letter engraved on the thigh. But I do not 
know the explanation. (2) The NewNaos (21:3). Here too the liturgical 
symbolism is gone, though the description of the new order which 
replaces the old J erusalem is taken from Leviticus: "Behold the Taber- 
nacle of God is with men, and he shall Tabernacle with them, and they 
shall be his peoples, and he (God with them) shall be their God." 

The word Tabernacle is used, but there is only a ghost of the old 
priestly symbolism. The new sanctuary is universal, human, catholic, 
not national or local. He goes on to describe it more fully in chapter 
22; but that belongs to the later part of the book, that deals with 
Christian worship. 

I have dealt fairly fully in this appendix with the liturgical back- 
ground of the book, because it seems to have been neglected and yet to 
be all important. It sheds a great deal of light on the tone and motives 
of the book. It reinforces the view that Babylon is priestly J erusalem. 
It may shed some light on the development of Christian worship, and 
even on the worship in the temple. 

I cannot pretend to have done more than blaze a trail through a 
dense forest of obscurities; and what I have revealed, I do not profess 
to understand. Until we know what a J ew felt when he saw the blood 
being splashed on the altar, or the fire consuming the lamb of the 
Tamid, we can hardly expect to enter into the complexities of the litur- 
gical poetry of St. J ohn. 

609 



THE LITURGICAL STRUCTURE OF REVELATION 

A. Hebrew Sacrifice 



Revelation. The Jerusalem Sacrifices. 

1-3 Introductory. The High Priest. 

4 Christian Worship A. The Creator. The Temple Ornaments. 

5 Christian Worship B . The Lamb . 1 . The lamb killed at dawn. 

6 (The Four Horsemen). 

Souls under Altar. Blood splashed on altar. 

(Sixth seal.) 

7 Christian Worship C. The Martyrs. (Feast of Tabernacles.) 

8 The Trumpets. Three Trumpets. 

Offering of Incense. Thisdoes not occur at this point in the daily ritual; 
but it does on the Day of Atonement. See below. In the Temple ritual 
the Silence follows the burning of the Incense. 

9 (The Trumpets, orginally three, symbolise the prophetic message.) 
11 (The Call of St. John, and his witness against Jerusalem.) 



Opening of Sanctuary in Heaven. 

12 and 13 (The Great Interlude.) 

14 The Lamb and his Followers on 

Mount Sion. 
First fruits. Without blemish. 
The Harvest (Passover). 
The Vintage (Ingathering). 

15 Song of Moses and the Lamb. 
The Sanctuary Opens. 

The Smoke of the Glory. 

No one may enter the Sanctuary. 



Gates of Temple and Sanctuary 
opened. 

2. Preparation of Sacrifice. 
Lamb skinned, cut up, washed, 

laid by altar. 
The meal offering. Bread. 
The drink offering. Wine. 
Pause for prayer and praise. 

3. Offering of Incense. 
Silence. 
Intercession. 



St. John has placed the Incense symbolism earlier, though the smoke 
recalls it here. On the Day of Atonement no one might enter the sanc- 
tuary till the High Priest had finished his work there. 
16 Pouring of the Blood. 

The Seven Bowls. In the daily ritual this is done at the beginning; but on 
the Day of Atonement the High Priest smeared the mercy seat and 
altar with blood at this point. 
17,18 Babylon Burned. 4. The Burning of the Victim. 

Her Cup. The Cup poured out. 

17:16 refers to the ritual of the sin-offering; 
17:2, 3 is reminiscent of the scapegoat. 



19 Alleluia Chorus. 



The Psalms. 

Song and Instruments. 



The Marriage Supper of the Lamb. 
The High Priest out of Heaven (cf. 

Ecclus. 50). 
The Great Supper of God. 
20 (Wars of the Messiah and Judgments.) 
21,22 The Tabernacle of God with Men (cf. Lev. 26:11-12). 

Christian Worship D. The Universal Worship of Mankind. 



6. The Feast on the Sacrifice. 



Note - This chart shows how the structure of the older part of Revelation fol- 
lows the events of the daily sacrifice, with variations suggested by the ritual of 
the Day of Atonement. 

610 



THE LITURGICAL STRUCTURE OF REVELATION 

B. Christian Worship 

1. SCHEME FOR CHRISTIAN SACRIFICIAL WORSHIP 

A. The Worship of the Creator. 
4:1 "Come up." 

In spirit, in heaven. 
4-6 Throne, Elders, Lamps, and 

Living Creatures. 
8 Holy, Holy, Holy. 
10 Elders join in: Worthy art thou 
etc. 



Lift up your hearts. 



The "Preface": With angels and 

archangels. 
The Sanctus. 
Conception of communion with 

heaven. 
It is meet and right. 



B. The Worship of the Lamb. 
5:6 The Lamb Sacrificed. 

8 Adoration of Lamb. 

14 Amen. 



Recital of redeeming life and death. 



Amen. 



2. THE WORSHIP OF THE TRIUMPHANT SAINTS 

This is a literary anticipation of the vision with which St. John closes his 
poem; it symbolises his faith that the martyrs are triumphant and do antici- 
pate tbt bliss prepared for all. 

C. The Martyrs in their Worship. 

Note that they are not included under A and B. 
7:9 Robes and Palms. 
10 Hosanna. Hosanna. 

15 Worship him day and night in his Borrowed from ritual of the Feast 
Sanctuary. of Tabernacles. 

God shall "Tabernacle upon them." 

3. THE IDEAL UNIVERSAL WORSHIP 

St. John here sketches a worship free from the limitations of time and 
space or of a national religion and a hereditary priesthood. The symbolism 
of Jewish liturgical worship is deliberately excluded. 

D. The Universal Worship of Mankind. 



21:3 The Tabernacling with Men. 
10 The Glory of God. 

22 No Sanctuary in it. 

23 Its Candlestick the Lamb. 

24 The kings of the earth. 

25 No night. 

22:4 Worship him: see his face. 
Name on their forehead. 



Not a temple made with hands. 

His "visible" presence. 

Not local. 

Seven-branch candlestick. 

Royal sacrifices by gentile kings at 

Jerusalem. 
Free of times and seasons. 
Open universal presence. 
High priest's petalon: all are 

priests. 



Note - In A and B St. John is consciously constructing a pattern for 
Christian worship, a pattern which was followed in every Eucharistic liturgy 
of the Catholic Church. It is based on Hebrew ritual, and no doubt reflects 
the custom of St. John's own day. 



611 



Appendix B 

CHRISTIAN ZIONISM 
AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

JAMES B. Jordan 



One of the most grotesque aspects of the sociology of modern 
American protestantism is the phenomenon of Christian Zionism. 
While related to the theology of dispensationalism, Christian Zionism 
is actually something altogether different theol Ogically. The purpose of 
this essay is to explore this movement, and in particular to point out 
its grievously heretical theoretical basis. To facilitate discussion, we 
shall interact with the expressed beliefs of a Christian Zionist, Jerry 
Falwell. We close with a brief note on Messianic Judaism. 

Zionism 

Zionism is a political movement built on the belief that the Jewish 
people deserve by right to possess the land of Palestine as their own. 
During the last part of the 19th and first part of the 20th centuries, 
Zionism gained support throughout the Christian West. This was due 
to two factors: the influence that Jewish wealth could purchase among 
politicians, and the emotional support that the history of Jewish tribu- 
lation could elicit from a Christianized public conscience. ' 

With this support, Zionist guerrillas succeeded in throwing Pales- 
tine into havoc during the late 1940s, and eventually took over that 
land. The result was the disenfranchisement of the people who had 
historically dwelt there. The Moslem Palestinians were formally disen- 
franchised, and the Palestinian Jews were effectively disenfranchised 
as a result of being swamped by larger numbers of European Jews who 
immigrated to the new State of Israel. 



Reprinted from James B. Jordan, The Sociology of the Church (Tyler, TX: 
Geneva Ministries, 1986). 

1. On the former aspect, see Ronald Sanders, The High Walls of Jerusalem: 
A History of the Balfour Declaration and the Birth of the British Mandate for 
Palestine (New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1984). 

612 



CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

It is important to realize that the most conservative Jews were anti- 
Zionists, believing that Palestine was not to become a Jewish land un- 
til made so by the coming of the Messiah. (This viewpoint was drama- 
tized in the recent and rewarding film, The Chosen.) Much of the most 
severe criticism of the political Zionist movement has come from anti- 
Zionist Jews, the most noted being Alfred M. Lilienthal. 2 

Spurious criticisms of Zionism abound on the right. I have no wish 
to be associated with these, and so at the outset I want to critique them 
before dealing with the heresy of Christian Zionism. First of all, we 
hear from some rightist sources that it is a myth that 6,000,000 Jews 
were slaughtered by the National Socialists. It is argued that there 
were not that many Jews in Europe, that it would be impossible logis- 
tically to do away with that many people given the time and facilities 
that the Nazis had, and so forth. This may be true; I have absolutely 
no way of knowing. The argument, however, seems to be that virtually 
no Jews were slaughtered by Nazis, and this is nonsense. Even if the 
number is 600,000 rather than six million, the event is still a moral 
horror of astonishing magnitude. Even if only one man were killed 
simply because he was a Jew, this would be a moral horror. And there 
can be no doubt but that many, many Jews were slaughtered. 

Of course, a blasphemous theology has been erected upon this in 
some Jewish circles, which is the notion that the Nazi persecutions ful- 
fill the prophecy of Isaiah 53, and that the Jews suffered for the sins of 
the world. As Christians we can only abominate such a construction, 
and we must call it what it is: a Satanic lie. Still, it is not necessary to 
deny the event itself in order to argue against an evil theological con- 
struction put upon the event. 

Perhaps more common is the assertion that most modern Jews are 
not Jews at all: They are Khazars. 3 The Khazari race seems to lie be- 
hind the Ashkenazik Jews of Eastern Europe. This kind of assertion 
can, of course, be debated. The real problem in the discussion is the 
notion that Jewishness is a blood or racial phenomenon. It is not. 

Biblically speaking, a Jew is someone who is covenanted into the 
people of the Jews by circumcision, for better or for worse. When 
Abraham was commanded to circumcise, he was told to circumcise his 
entire household, including his 318 fighting men and his other domes- 
tic servants (Gen. 14:14; 17:10-14). Competent scholars imagine that 
Sheik Abraham's household probably included at the very least 3000 
persons. These servants multiplied as the years went by, and Jacob in- 



2. Lilienthal has authored several books on this subject. His magnum opus 
is The Zionist Connection (New York: Dodd, Mead, & Co., 1978). 

3. On the Khazars, see Arthur Koestler, The Thirteenth Tribe (New York: 
Random House, 1976). 

613 



APPENDIX B 

herited them all (Gen. 27:37). Although only 70 from the loins of 
Jacob went down into Egypt, so many servants went along that they 
had to be given the whole land of Goshen in which to live. 

All these people were Jews, but only a small fraction actually had 
any of Abraham's blood in them. Later on we see many other people 
joining the Jews; indeed, the lists of David's men include many for- 
eigners, of whom Uriah the Hittite is but the best known. What this 
demonstrates is that covenant, not race, has always been the defining 
mark of a Jew (as it also is of a Christian). Genealogical records were 
kept for the immediate family, of course, since the Messiah had to be 
of the actual blood of Abraham, and later of David; but this could not 
have applied to more than a fraction of the total number of people. 

Thus, the Jews are those who claim to be Jews, who are cove- 
nanted with the Jews. The Khazari converted to Judaism in the Middle 
Ages, and they are Jews, British-Israelite rightist nonsense to the con- 
trary. 4 (Of course, modern Zionists do not understand this religious 
principle any more than do their British-Israelil e critics. Both conceive 
of everything in terms of blood and race.) 

So then, it is spurious to criticize Zionism on the grounds that 
"J ews really didn't suffer during World War II ," or "Who knows who 
the real J ews are?" It is pretty obvious who thej ews are, and they are, 
as always, a force to be reckoned with. 

The third line of criticism against Zionism concerns the Tightness 
or wrongness of its invasion and conquest of Palestine. We can listen 
to arguments to the effect that thej ews stole the land from its inhabit- 
ants, that they have persecuted the Palestinians, that they committed 
horrors during their guerrilla campaign, and the like. Then we can 
listen to arguments that say that thej ews in Pa lestine were mistreated 
under Moslem rule, that the Palestinians are better off today under 
enlightenedj ewish government than they formerly were, that thej ews 
have exercised dominion over the land and the Moslems did not, 
thereby forfeiting their right to it, and the like. 

Actually, none of this is any of our direct concern as Christians. As 
Christians we see both J ews and Moslems as groups that have rejected 
Christ as Messiah, and who have opposed the true faith. Jf they want 
to convert, we rejoice. If they want to kill each other off, then that is 
too bad, but let them have at it - there's nothing we can do about it. 



4. British-Israelitism claims that the Anglo-Saxon people are the true Jews, 
and thus inherit the covenant promises by means of race alone. This weird, 
stupid idea is promoted by the Armstrong cult, but also crops up in right wing 
Christian circles. For a fine analysis and refutation of this viewpoint, see Louis 
F. DeBoer, The New Phariseeism (Columbus, NJ: The American Presbyterian 
Press, 1978). 

614 



CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

But then, that brings us to the issue: Are Bible-believing Christians 
supposed to support a Jewish State, for theological reasons? Such is 

the assertion of Jerry Falwell, and of the heresy of Christian Zionism. 
Let us turn to this doctrine. 

Orthodox Dispensationatism versus Christian Zionism 

During the nineteenth century, a peculiar doctrinal notion known 
as "dispensationalism" arose. Its leading lights were Darby and Sco- 
field; its Bible was the Scofield Reference Bible; and in recent years its 
primary headquarters has been Dallas Theological Seminary. Technic- 
ally, dispensationalism teaches that God has two peoples in the history 
of the world: Israel and the "Church." We presently live in the 
"Church Age," and God's people today are Christians, the Church. At 
the present time, the Jews are apostate enemies of God and of Christ, 
and are under God's judgment until they repent. 

Someday soon (It's always soon!), Christ will return to earth invis- 
ibly and snatch away all the Church-Christians (this is called the "Rap- 
ture" of the saints). At that point, God will go back to dealing with 
Israel. There will be a seven-year period called "The Tribulation," and 
during that period, apostate Jewry will form an anti-God alliance with 
the Beast, but God will begin to convert the Jews, and in time the 
Beast will turn and begin to persecute these converted Jews. Just when 
things look hopeless, Christ will return and inaugurate the Millennium. 

One other point to note: There are absolutely no signs that the 
Rapture of the Church is near. It will come "as a thief in the night." 

Now, this entire scheme, though popular in recent years, has no 
roots in historic Christian interpretation of the Scriptures, and at pres- 
ent it is collapsing under the weight of criticism from Bible-believing 
scholars of a more historically orthodox persuasion. All the same, 
there are several things to note. 

First, by teaching that there are no signs that precede the Rapture, 
dispensationalism clearly implies that the modern State of Israel has 
nothing to do with Bible prophecy. If Israel collapsed tomorrow, it 
would make no difference. The existence of the State of Israel, while it 
may encourage dispensationalists to believe that the Rapture is near, is 
of no theologically prophetic importance. 

Second, dispensationalism teaches that Jews of today, and even 
into the Tribulation period, are apostate, and this certainly implies 
that they are under the wrath and judgment of God. Christians should 
minister to them, and try to convert them, and show them all kindness 
as fellow human beings; but Christians should understand that during 
the Church Age, the Jews are not the people of God. Rather, the 
Church is the people of God today. 

615 



APPENDIX B 

Third, by teaching that Israelis "set aside" during the Church Age, 
dispensationalism clearly implies that the promises made to Israel are 
also "set aside" during that period. The land promise, and the promise 
"those who bless you, I will bless," have been set aside, until we re- 
enter "prophetic time." Thus, the Jews have no right to the land during 
the Church Age, and also there is no particular blessing for Gentiles 
who treat the Jews with especial favor. 

Fourth, dispensational theologians are most strict on the point that 
the Church is a "new people," composed as one body in Christ of both 
Jew and Gentile. During the Church Age, the distinction between 
these two is not to be felt in the Church. Thus, dispensational theology 
is, by implication, opposed to the kind of standpoint articulated in 
many "Messianic Jewish" groups. 

What I am setting forth is standard, consistent dispensationalism. 
As far as I am concerned, dispensationalism is sorely wrong in its pro- 
phetic view, but it is at least orthodox in its view of salvation and bless- 
ing. Blessing comes to the Jews when they repent and accept Christ; 
until then, they are under God's curse. How can it be otherwise? All 
blessings are in Christ. This is the teaching of orthodox Christianity, 
and Darby and the early dispensationalists were orthodox Christians 
on this point, as far as I can tell. 

Jerry Falwell and Christian Zionism 

My description of dispensationalism may seem rather strange, 
because this is not the teaching of Hal Lindsey, of the modern Dallas 
Theological Seminary, or of other modern dispensationalists. I call 
these people "pop-dispies," for short. In contrast to the dispensational 
system, these people hold that God presently has two peoples on the 
earth: the Church and Israel. The consistent dispensational system 
teaches that there are no prophecies whose fulfillment takes place dur- 
ing the Church Age, because the Church exists outside of prophetic 
time, but modern pop-dispies teach that the reestablishment of the na- 
tion of Israel in 1948 was a fulfillment of prophecy. 

Consistent dispensationalism teaches that God is dealing with His 
"heavenly" people today (the Church), and that during the Church 
Age, God has "set aside" His apostate "earthly" people (Israel). Pop- 
dispies, on the contrary, hold that even though apostate, Israel still 
must be regarded as being under God'spresent blessing. They hold the 
heretical notion that the Jews do not need to repent in order to obtain 
the blessings of God's covenant. They hold the unBiblical notion that 
apostate Jewry is not today under the wrath of God. 

A well-known advocate of this unfortunate position is the Rev. 
Jerry Falwell. A modern Zionist, Merrill Simon, has recognized this 

616 



CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

fact, and has written a book, Jerry Falwell and the Jews : s 'This book is 
a series of interviews with Rev. Falwell, designed to present him as a 
friend of Zionism, and to alleviate suspicions that liberal Zionist Jews 
naturally have when it comes to a supposedly orthodox, fundamental 
Christian preacher. 

I should like to cite some quotations from this book, and make 
some appropriate comments. The books says, however, "No part of 
this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written 
consent from the publishers ," which rather cramps my style. You'll 
just have to believe me, as I summarize Falwell's comments. You can 
always go to your local library and look it up for yourself. 

On page 1 3, Falwell is asked if he considers the destruction of Jeru- 
salem in A.D. 70 as a sign of God's rejection of Israel. Falwell answers 
by saying that he surely does not believe a "vengeful" God brought the 
Roman army to Jerusalem to destroy the Jews. Falwell ascribes the 
event rather to anti-Semitism. 

Now let's hear what the Bible says about it. We needn't quote Lev- 
iticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28 in their entirety. Read them at your lei- 
sure, and ask this question: Do we see an angry, "vengeful" God here 
threatening to bring horrors upon Israel if they apostatize? Also read 
Psalm 69:21 and ask Whom this refers to, and then continue reading 
until the end of the Psalm, remembering that the Remans surrounded 
Jerusalem at Passover time. Notice Psalm 69:25 speaks of the "desola- 
tion" of Jerusalem, and consider that in connection with Jesus' pro- 
nouncement of the desolation of Jerusalem in Matthew 23:38. Falwell 
is completely out of line with Scripture on this point. 

On page 25, Falwell says that he believes anti-Semitism is inspired 
exclusively by Satan, as part of his opposition to God. Against this, 
read Job chapters 1 and 2. Here we find that Satan is never allowed to 
do anything without God's permission. Moreover, we find from the 
rest of the Bible that God frequently raises up enemies against His peo- 
ple, as scourges to punish them. Read the Book of Judges. Read Kings 
and Chronicles about Assyria and Babylon. Read Habakkuk. This is 
not some minor point tucked away in some obscure passage. Rather, 
this truth pervades the entire Scriptures. 

It is true that anti-Jewish feelings are not part of the Christian mes- 
sage, and that Christians should be as considerate toward Jews as they 
are toward all other men. It is also true, however, that it is God Who 
stirs up the Babylonians and Assyrians. Until the Jews repent and con- 
vert (as Remans 1 1 promises that someday they shall), they remain 
God's enemies, and He does stir up pagans against them. Anti-Jewishness 



5. Middle Village, NY: Jonathan David Publishers, Inc., 1984. 

617 



APPENDIX B 

has been part and parcel of secular humanism from the time of Fred- 
erick II, through the Renaissance, down to today. The Christian 
church protected the Jews throughout the Middle Ages, and has con- 
tinued to do SO. 6 

On page 55, Falwell says that Jews and Christian may differ at 
some points, but they have a common heritage in the Old Testament. 
Would Falwell be willing to say the same to a Moslem? At any rate, 
the statement is incorrect. Judaism looks to the Talmud, not to the 
Bible, as its law. It shows extreme ignorance of Judaism, medieval or 
modern, to think that Christians can appeal to the Old Testament as 
common ground. Judaism never approaches the Bible except through 
the Talmud. 

On page 62, Falwell says that the future of the State of Israel is 
more important than any other political question. He says that the 
Jews have a theological, historical, and legal right to Palestine. He 
affirms his personal commitment to Zionism, and says that he learned 
Zionism from the Old Testament. 

The Bible teaches us that when Adam and Eve rebelled, they lost 
their right to the Garden, and God cast them out. God used the very 
same principle with Israel, giving them the land, but warning them 
over and over again that if they rebelled, they would be cast out. It is 
beyond me how Falwell can read the Old Testament Scriptures and fail 
to see this. Modern apostate Jews have absolutely no theological, and 
therefore no historical and legal right to the land of Palestine. 

The church of all ages has always taught that the New Testament 
equivalent of the "land" is the whole world, in Christ, and ultimately 
the New Earth. God's people, Christ-confessors, are given the whole 
earth, in principle, and progressively will take dominion over it in 
time. Even if dispensationalism were correct in its assertion that some- 
day the land of Palestine will be given back to the Jews, we should still 
have to say that they must convert to Christ first! 

On page 68, Falwell says that one thing in modern Israel disturbs 
him. It is that Christians do not have the liberty to evangelize for the 
gospel. In other words, Falwell is aware that Christians are being per- 
secuted in Israel today, but he still supports Israel! If this is not a be- 
trayal of the faith, what is? 

Finally, on p. 145, Falwell is asked about abortion, since modern 
Jews advocate abortion. Simon asks him whether or not the death pen- 
alty should be used against a woman who has an abortion, and her 



6. On the church's protection of the Jews, see Harold J. Berman (himself a 
Jew), Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition 
(Cambridge: Harvard U. Press, 1983), pp. 90,222. 

618 



CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

physician. Falwell replies that he has never thought about this before, 
and that he thinks any action against the woman would be wrong. 

Well, there we see it. Mr. Simon knows what the issues really are, 
but Rev. Falwell is so confused, befuddled, and blind that he cannot 
see them. Obviously, if abortion is murder, then we have to advocate 
the death penalty for it! Of course, Falwell here sounds just like most 
of the rest of the modern anti-abortion movement: They've never even 
thought about some of the most basic, elementary issues involved. 
"Abortion is murder," they cry. "Reinstitute the death penalty for mur- 
der," says the Moral Majority (Falwell's political group). Anybody 
with an IQ over 25 can figure out the implications of these two state- 
ments, but apparently Falwell has never thought of this before. We 
live in sorry times, when such a novice is the spokesman for the New 
Christian Right ! 

Christian Zionism is blasphemy. It is a heresy. Christians have no 
theological stake whatsoever in the modern State of Israel. It is an 
anti-God, anti-Christ nation. Until it repents and says "blessed is He 
Who comes in the Name of the Lord," it will continue to be under the 
wrath of God. The modern State of Israel permits the persecution of 
Christians and Christian missionaries. We must pray that God will 
change the hearts of Jews, as of all other pagans, to receive Christ. But 
to support the enemies of the Gospel is not the mark of a Gospel min- 
ister, but of an anti-Christ. 

I've been pretty hard on Jerry. Somebody needs to be. This kind of 
thing is inexcusable, and needs to be repented of. A couple of years 
ago I wrote an essay defending Falwell against a somewhat liberal 
critic' What I have said here does not change what I wrote then, be- 
cause Falwell's critic was wrong; but I have certainly come to take a 
dimmer view of Mr. Falwell since. His trumpet is giving forth an un- 
certain sound. He needs to clean it out. 

Messianic Judaism 

In recent years, a large number of Jewish young people have turned 
to Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. Many of these young people 
have formed "Messianic Synagogues," and have articulated here and 
there various theologies of "Messianic Judaism." For many, Messianic 
Judaism is simply a way of keeping some Jewish cultural traditions 
while becoming Christian, and there is nothing wrong with this. It is 
proper for Christians of various tribes and tongues to give expression 



7. See my essay, "The Moral Majority: An Anabaptist Critique," in James 
B. Jordan, ed. The Failure of the American Baptist Culture, Christianity and 
Civilization No. 1 (Tyler, TX: Geneva Ministries, 1982). 

619 



APPENDIX B 

to the faith in a variety of cultural forms. 

Unfortunately, for some, Messianic Judaism is seen as an alternative 
to historic Christianity. This is due to the influence of pop-dispyism. 
After all, if the Millennium is right around the corner, and Jewish cul- 
ture will be imperialistically triumphant during the Millennium, then 
even today Jewish practices anticipate that superiority. In fact, some 
Messianic Jews apparently believe that they can claim unlimited finan- 
cial support from Gentile Christians, because of this preeminence. 

Most of what I have written regarding Christian Zionism above 
applies to this group of Messianic Jews. I should like, however, to call 
attention to another facet of the matter. These Messianic Jews believe 
wrongly that Gentile Christianity (the historic church) departed from 
Biblical forms in the early days of the church. They see as their mis- 
sion a restoration of these customs, which they believe they have pre- 
served. 

In fact, this is completely false. Anyone who has seen a presenta- 
tion of "Christ in the Passover" is amazed at the number of non- 
Biblical rites that are discussed and exhibited (the use of eggs, bread 
broken in three pieces and hidden in cloth, etc.). These customs arose 
after the birth of the church, and do not preserve Old Testament ritual 
at all. Moreover, to try to place a Christian interpretation on the vari- 
ous features of these rituals is most misguided and artificial. Clever as 
such presentations are, they are grossly misleading. 

As a matter of fact, the leading features of Temple and Synagogue 
worship were brought straight into the church, as she spoiled the new 
enemies of God: apostate Jewry. The period of this spoiling was a.d. 
30 to A.D. 70. Once the church had completed her integration of the 
spoils of the Old Covenant into her new, transfigured body, God de- 
stroyed the remnants of the Old Covenant completely. Modern Jewish 
rituals and music owe far more to racial/cultural inheritance from the 
peoples of Eastern Europe than they do to the Old Covenant. 8 

Thus, while there is nothing wrong with converted Jews maintain- 
ing a cultural continuity with their past, there are no grounds for the 
assumption that post-Christian Jewry has preserved the musical and 



8. See Gary North, "Some Problems with 'Messianic Judaism,'" in Biblical 
Economics Today 7:3 (Apr./May, 1984). 

9. Louis Bouyerhas shown at considerable length that the Eucharistic 
prayer of the early church was a modification of the prayers of the Synagogue 
and Temple. See Bouyer, Eucharist (Notre Dame: U. of Notre Dame Press, 
1968). Similarly, Eric Werner has shown that the plainchant of the Christian 
church preserves the style of music known among the Jews of the Old Testa- 
ment period. See Werner, The Sacred Bridge (Columbia U. Press, 1959; the 
paperback by Schocken only reproduces the first half of this important study). 

620 



CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM 

liturgical forms of the Bible. Those forms were preserved in the 
church, and in her alone. Jews who wish to recover their heritage 
would do well to study the early Church, not the traditions of Eastern 
European cultures. 



621 



Therefore thou shalt keep the commandments of the Lord thy God, to 
walk in his ways, and to fear him. For the Lord thy God bringeth thee into a 
good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and depths that spring out 
of valleys and hills; A land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig trees, and 
pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey; A land wherein thou shalt eat 
bread without scarceness, thou shalt not lack any thing in it; a land whose 
stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig brass. When thou hast 
eaten and art full, then thou shalt bless the Lord thy God for the good land 
which he bath given thee. Beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God, in 
not keeping his commandments, and his judgments, and his statutes, which I 
command thee this day: Lest when thou hast eaten and art full, and hast built 
goodly houses, and dwelt therein; And when thy herds and thy flocks multiply, 
and thy silver and thy gold is multiplied, and all Ihat thou hast is multiplied; 
Then thine heart be lifted up, and thou forget the Lord thy God, which 
brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage; Who 
led thee through that great and terrible wilderness, wherein were fiery serpents, 
and scorpions, and drought, where there was no water; who brought thee 
forth water out of the rock of flint; Who fed thee in the wilderness with manna, 
which thy fathers knew not, that he might humble thee, and that he might 
prove thee, to do thee good at thy latter end; And thou say in thine heart, My 
power and the might of mine hand bath gotten me this wealth. But thou shalt 
remember the Lord thy God: for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth, 
that he may establish his covenant which he sware unto thy fathers, as it is this 
day. And it shall be, if thou do at all forget the Lord thy God, and walk after 
other gods, and serve them, and worship them, I testify against you this day 
that ye shall surely perish. As the nations which the Lord destroyeth before 
your face, so shall ye perish; because ye would noi. be obedient unto the voice 
of the Lord your God. 

- Deuteronomy 8:6-20 



For there is no respect of persons with God. For as many as have sinned 
without law shall also perish without law: and as many as have sinned in the 
law shall be judged by the law; (For not the hearers of the law are just before 
God, but the doers of the law shall be justified. For when the Gentiles, which 
have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having 
not the law, are a law unto themselves: Which shew the work of the law written 
in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the 
mean while accusing or else excusing one another;) In the day when God shall 
judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel. 

- Remans 2:11-16 



Appendix C 

COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, 
AND BIBLICAL LAW 

G ary North 



The concept of common grace is seldom discussed outside of Cal- 
vinistic circles, although all Christian theologies must come to grips 
eventually with the issues underlying the debate over common grace. 
The phrase itself goes back at least to the days of colonial American 
Puritanism. I came across it on several occasions when I was doing re- 
search on the colonial Puritans' economic doctrines and experiments. 
The concept goes back at least to John Calvin's writings. l 

Before venturing into the forest of theological debate, let me state 
what I believe is the meaning of the word "grace." The Bible uses the 
idea in several ways, but the central meaning of grace is this: A gift 
given to God's creatures on the basis, first, of His favor to His Son, 
Jesus Christ, the incarnation of the second person of the Trinity, and 
second, on the basis of Christ's atoning work on the cross. Grace is 
not strictly unmerited, for Christ merits every gift, but in terms of the 
merit of the creation — merit deserved by a creature because of its mere 
creaturehood - there is none. In short, when we speak of any aspect of 
the creation, other than the incarnate Jesus Christ, grace is defined as 
an unmerited gift. The essence of grace is conveyed in James 1:17: 
"Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh 
down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither 
shadow of turning ." 

Special grace is the phrase used by theologians to describe the gift 
of eternal salvation. Paul writes: "For by grace are ye saved through 
faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, 
lest any man should boast" (Eph. 2:8-9). He also writes: "But God 



The original version of this essay appeared in the Winter, 1976-77 issue of 
The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, published by the Chalcedon Foun- 
dation, P. O. Box 158, Vallecito, California 9525 1. 

1. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion (1559), Book II, Section 
II, chapter 16; II:III:3; III: XIV:2. 

623 



APPENDIX C 

commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, 
Christ died for us" (Rem. 5:8). God selects those on whom He will 
have mercy (Rem. 9:18). He has chosen these people to be recipients 
of His gift of eternal salvation, and He chose them before the founda- 
tion of the world (Eph. 1:4-6). 

But there is another kind of grace, and it is misunderstood. Com- 
mon grace is equally a gift of God to His creatures, but it is distin- 
guished from special grace in a number of crucial ways. A debate has 
gone on for close to a century within Calvinist ic circles concerning the 
nature and reality of common grace. I hope that this essay will con- 
tribute some acceptable answers to the people of God, though I have 
little hope of convincing those who have been involved in this debate 
for 60 years. 

Because of the confusion associated with the term "common 
grace," let me offer James Jordan's description of it. Common grace is 
the equivalent of the crumbs that fall from the master's table that the 
dogs eat. This is how the Canaanite woman described her request of 
healing by Jesus, and Jesus healed her because of her understanding 
and faith (Matt. 15:27 -28).2 

Background of the Debate 

In 1924, the Christian Reformed Church dlebated the subject, and 
the decision of the Synod led to a major and seemingly permanent 
division within the ranks of the denomination. The debate was of con- 
siderable interest to Dutch Calvinists on both sides of the Atlantic, 
although traditional American Calvinists were hardly aware of the 
issue, and Arminian churches were (and are si ill) completely unaware 
of it. Herman Hoeksema, who was perhaps the most brilliant system- 
atic theologian in America in this century, left the Christian Reformed 
Church to form the Protestant Reformed Church. He and his follow- 
ers were convinced that, contrary to the decision of the CRC, there is 
no such thing as common grace. 

The doctrine of common grace, as formulated in the disputed 
"three points" of the Christian Reformed Church in 1924, asserts the 
following: 

1. There is a "favorable attitude of God toward mankind in 
general, and not alone toward the elect, . . ." Furthermore, 



2. Dogs in Israel were not highly loved animals, so the analogy with com- 
mon grace is biblically legitimate. "And ye shall be holy men unto me: neither 
shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts in the field; ye shall cast it to the 
dogs" (Ex. 22:31). If we assume that God loves pagans the way that modern 
people love their dogs, then the analogy will not fk, 

624 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

there is "also a certain favor or grace of God which he shows to 
his creatures in general." 

2. God provides "restraint of sin in the life of the individual 
and in society, . . ." 

3. With regard to "the performance of so-called civic right- 
eousness ... the unregenerate, though incapable of any saving 
good . . . can perform such civic good ." 3 

These principles can serve as a starting point for a discussion of 
common grace. The serious Christian eventually will be faced with the 
problem of explaining the good once he faces the biblical doctrine of 
evil. James 1:17 informs us that all good gifts are from God. The same 
point is made in Deuteronomy, chapter 8, which is quoted as the intro- 
duction to this essay. It is clear that the unregenerate are the benefici- 
aries of God's gifts. None of the participants to the debate denies the 
existence of the gifts. What is denied by the Protestant Reformed crit- 
ics is that these gifts imply the favor of God as far as the unregenerate 
are concerned. They categorically deny the first point of the original 
three points. 

For the moment, let us refrain from using the word grace. Instead, 
let us limit ourselves to the word gift. The existence of gifts from God 
raises a whole series of questions: 

Does a gift from God imply His favor? 

Does an unregenerate man possess the power to do good? 

Does the existence of good behavior on the part of the unbe- 
liever deny the doctrine of total depravity? 

Does history reveal a progressive separation between saved 
and lost? 

Would such a separation necessarily lead to the triumph of 
the unregenerate? 

Is there a common ground intellectually between Christians 
and non-Christians? 

Can Christians and non-Christians cooperate successfully in 
certain areas? 

Do God's gifts increase or decrease over time? 

Will the cultural mandate (dominion covenant) of Genesis 
1:28 be fulfilled? 



3. Cornelius Van Til, Common Grace (Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Re- 
formed Publishing Co., 1954), pp. 20-22. This essay was reprinted in Van Til, 
Common Grace and the Gospel (Nutley, New Jersey: Presbyterian & Re- 
formed, 1974), same pagination. 

625 



APPENDIX C 

The Favor of God 

This is a key point of dispute between those who affirm and those 
who deny the existence of common grace. I wish to save time, if not 
trouble, so let me say from the outset that 1 he Christian Reformed 
Church's 1924 formulation of the first point is defective. The Bible 
does not indicate that God in any way favors the unregenerate. The 
opposite is asserted: "He that believeth on the Son bath everlasting 
life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath 
of God abideth on him" (John 3:36). The prayer of Christ recorded in 
John 17 reveals His favor toward the redeemed and them alone. There 
is a fundamental ethical separation between the saved and the lost. 
God hated Esau and loved Jacob, before either was born (Rem. 
9:10-13). 

What are we to make of the Bible's passages that have been used to 
support the idea of limited favor toward creatures in general? Without 
exception, they refer to gifts of God to the unregenerate. They do not 
imply God' s favor. For example, there is this affirmation: "The Lord is 
good to all: and his tender mercies are over all his works" (Ps. 145:9). 
The verse preceding this one tells us that God is compassionate, slow 
to anger, gracious. Romans 2:4 tells us He is longsuffering. Luke 
6:35-36 says: 

But love ye your enemies, and do good, and lend, hoping for 
nothing again; and your reward shall be great, and ye shall be 
the children of the Highest: for he is kind unto the unthankful 
and to the evil. Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is 
merciful. 

I Timothy 4:10 uses explicit language: '"For therefore we both 
labour and suffer reproach, because we trust in the living God, who is 
the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe." The Greek 
word here translated as "Saviour" is transliterated soter: one who 
saves, heals, protects, or makes whole. God saves (heals) everyone, 
especially those who believe. Unquestionably, the salvation spoken of 
is universal — not in the sense of special grace, and therefore in the 
sense of common grace. This is probably the most difficult verse in the 
Bible for those who deny universal salvation from hell and who also 
deny common grace. 4 

The most frequently cited passage used by those who defend the 



4. Gary North, "Aren't There Two Kinds of Salvation?", Question 75 in 
North, 75 Bible Questions Your Instructors Pray You Won 't Ask (Tyler, Texas: 
Spurgeon Press, 1984). 

626 



COMMON GRACE , ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

idea of God's favor to the unregenerate is Matthew 5:44-45: 

But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse 
you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which 
despitefully use you, and persecute you; That ye may be the chil- 
dren of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to 
rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and 
on the unjust. 

It is understandable how such verses, in the absence of other verses 
that more fully explain the nature and intent of God's gifts, could lead 
men to equate God's favor and gifts. Certainly it is true that God pro- 
tects, heals, rewards, and cares for the unregenerate. But none of 
these verses indicates an attitude of favor toward the unregenerate 
beneficiaries of His gifts. Only in the use of the word "favor" in its 
slang form of "do me a favor" can we argue that a gift from God is the 
same as His favor. Favor, in the slang usage, simply means gift — an 
unmerited gift from the donor. But if favor is understood as an atti- 
tude favorable to the unregenerate, or an emotional commitment by 
God to the unregenerate for their sakes, then it must be said, God 
shows no favor to the unrighteous. 

Coals of Fire 

One verse in the Bible, above all others, informs us of the underly- 
ing attitude of God toward those who rebel against Him despite His 
gifts. This passage is the concomitant to the oft-quoted Luke 6:35-36 
and Matthew 5:44-45. It is Proverbs 25:21-22, which Paul cites in 
Remans 12:20: 

If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be 
thirsty, give him water to drink: For thou shalt heap coals of fire 
upon his head, and the Lord shall reward thee. 

Why are we to be kind to our enemies? First, because God in- 
structs us to be kind. He is kind to them, and we are to imitate Him. 
Second, by showing mercy, we heap coals of fire on their rebellious 
heads. From him to whom much is given, much shall be required 
(Luke 12:47-48). Our enemy will receive greater punishment for all 
eternity because we have been merciful to him. Third, we are promised 
a reward from God, which is always a solid reason for being obedient 
to His commands. The language could not be any plainer. Any discus- 
sion of common grace which omits Proverbs 25:21-22 from considera- 
tion is not a serious discussion of the topic. 

627 



APPENDIX C 

The Bible is very clear. The problem with the vast majority of 
interpreters is that they still are influenced by the standards of self- 
proclaimed autonomous humanism. Biblically, love is the fulfilling of 
the law (Rem. 13:8). Love thy neighbor, we are instructed. Treat him 
with respect. Do not oppress or cheat him. Do not covet his goods or 
his wife. Do not steal from him. In treating him lawfully, you have ful- 
filled the commandment to love him. In so doing, you have rendered 
him without excuse on the day of judgment, God's people are to 
become conduits of God's gifts to the unregenerate. 

This is not to say that every gift that we give to the lost must be 
given in an attempt to heap coals of fire on their heads. We do not 
know God's plan for the ages, except in its broad outlines. We do not 
know who God intends to redeem. So we give freely, hoping that some 
might be redeemed and the others damned. We play our part in the sal- 
vation of some and the damnation of others. For example, regenerate 
marriage partners are explicitly instructed to ti eat their unregenerate 
partners lawfully and faithfully. "For what knowest thou, O wife, 
whether thou shalt save thy husband? or how knowest thou, man, 
whether thou shalt save thy wife" (I Cor. 7:16)? We treat our friends 
and enemies lawfully, for they are made in the image of God. But we 
are to understand that our honest treatment does make it far worse on 
the day of judgment for those with whom we have dealt righteously 
than if we had disobeyed God and been poor testimonies to them, 
treating them unlawfully. 

God gives rebels enough rope to hang themselves for all eternity. 
This is a fundamental implication of the doctrine of common grace. 
The law of God condemns some men, yet it simultaneously serves as a 
means of repentance and salvation for others (Rem. 5:19-20). The 
same law produces different results in different people. What separates 
men is the saving grace of God in election. The law of God serves as a 
tool of final destruction against the lost, yet it also serves as a tool of 
active reconstruction for the Christian. The law rips up the kingdom 
of Satan as it serves as the foundation for the kingdom of God on 
earth. 

Christ is indeed the savior of all people prior to the day of judg- 
ment (I Tim. 4:10). Christ sustains the whole universe (Col. 1:17). 
Without Him, no living thing could survive. He grants to His crea- 
tures such gifts as time, law, order, power, and knowledge. He grants 
all of these gifts to Satan and his rebellious host. In answer to the 
question, "Does God show His grace and mercy to all creation?" the 
answer is emphatically yes. To the next question, "Does this mean that 
God in some way demonstrates an attitude of favor toward Satan?" 
the answer is emphatically no. God is no more favorable toward Satan 

628 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

and his demons than He is to Satan's human followers. But this does 
not mean that He does not bestow gifts upon them — gifts that they in 
no way deserve. 

Total Depravity and God's Restraining Hand 
Law is a means of grace: common grace to those who are perish- 
ing, special grace to those who are elect. Law is also a form of curse: 
special curse to those who are perishing, common curse to those who 
are elect. We are all under law as creatures, and because of the curse of 
Adam and the creation, we suffer the temporal burdens of Adam's 
transgression. The whole world labors under this curse (Rem. 
8:18-23). Nevertheless, "all things work together for good to them that 
love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose" (Rem. 
8:28). As men, we are all under law and the restraint of law, both 
physical and moral law, and we can use this knowledge of law either to 
bring us external blessings or to rebel and bring destruction. But we 
know also that all things work together for evil for them that hate 
God, to them who are the rejected according to His purpose (Rem. 
9:17-22). Common grace - common curse, special grace - special 
curse: we must affirm all four. 

The transgression of the law brings a special curse to the unregen- 
erate. It is a curse of eternal duration. But this same transgression 
brings only a common curse to the elect. A Christian gets sick, he 
suffers losses, he is blown about by the storm, he suffers sorrow, but he 
does not suffer the second death (Rev. 2:11;20:6, 14). For the believer, 
the common curses of life are God' s chastening, signs of God' s favor 
(Heb.l2:6). The difference between common curse and special curse is 
not found in the intensity of human pain or the extent of the loss; the 
difference lies in God's attitude toward those who are laboring under 
the external and psychological burdens. There is an attitude of favor 
toward the elect, but none toward the unregenerate. The common 
curse of the unregenerate is, in fact, a part of the special curse under 
which he will labor forever. The common curse of the elect man is a 
part of the special grace in terms of which he finally prospers. The 
common curse is nonetheless common, despite its differing effects on 
the eternal state of men. The law of God is sure. God does not respect 
persons (Rem. 2:11), with one exception: the person of Jesus Christ. 
(Christ was perfect, yet He was punished.) 

But if the effects of the law are common in cursing, then the effects 
of the law are also common in grace. This is why we need a doctrine of 
common grace. This doctrine gives meaning to the doctrine of com- 
mon curse, and vice versa. The law of God restrains men in their evil 
ways, whether regenerate or unregenerate. The law of God restrains 

629 



APPENDIX C 

"the old man" or old sin nature in Christians. Law's restraint is a true 
blessing for all men. In fact, it is even a temporary blessing for Satan 
and his demons. All those who hate God love death (Prov. 8:36b). 
This hatred of God is restrained during history. Evil men are given 
power, life, and time that they do not deserve. So is Satan. They can- 
not fully work out the implications of their rebellious, suicidal faith, 
for God's restraint will not permit it. 

The common grace which restrains the totally depraved character 
of Satan and all his followers is, in fact, part of God's special curse on 
them. Every gift returns to condemn them on the day of judgment, 
heaping coals of fire on their heads. On the other hand, the common 
grace of God in law also must be seen as a pari of the program of spe- 
cial grace to His elect. God's special gifts to His elect, person by per- 
son, are the source of varying rewards on the day of judgment (I Cor. 
3:1 1-15). Common grace serves to condemn the rebels proportionately 
to the benefits they have received on earth, and it serves as the operat- 
ing backdrop for the special grace given to the elect. The laws of God 
offer a source of order, power, and dominion. Some men use this com- 
mon grace to their ultimate destruction, while other use it to their eter- 
nal benefit. It is nonetheless common, despite its differing effects on 
the eternal state of men. 

The Good That Men Do 

The Bible teaches that there is no good thing inherent in fallen 
man; his heart is wicked and deceitful (Jer. 17:9). All our self- 
proclaimed righteousness is as filthy rags in the sight of God (Isa. 
64:6). Nevertheless, we also know that history has meaning, that there 
are permanent standards that enable us to distinguish the life of 
Joseph Stalin from the life of Albert Schweitzer. There are different 
punishments for different unregenerate men (Luke 12:45-48). This 
does not mean that God in some way favors one lost soul more than 
another. It only means that in the eternal plan of God there must be an 
eternal affirmation of the validity and permanence of His law. It is 
worse to be a murderer than a liar or a thief. Not every sin is a sin unto 
death (I John 5:16-17). History is not some amorphous, undifferenti- 
ated mass. It is not an illusion. It has implications for eternity. There- 
fore, the law of God stands as a reminder to unregenerate men that it 
is better to conform in part than not to conform at all, even though 
the end result of rebellion is destruction. There are degrees of punish- 
ment (Luke 12:47-48). 

But what is the source of the good that evil men do? It can be no 
other than God (James 1:17). He is the source of all good. He restrains 
men in different ways, and the effects of this restraint, person to per- 

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COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

son, demon to demon, can be seen throughout all eternity. Not favor 
toward the unregenerate, but rather perfect justice of law and total 
respect toward the law of God on the part of God Himself are the 
sources of the good deeds that men who are lost may accomplish in 
time and on earth. There are, to use the vernacular, "different strokes 
for different folks," not because God is a respecter of persons, but 
because the deeds of different men are different. 

The Knowledge of the Law 

The work of the law is written on every man's heart. There is no 
escape. No man can plead ignorance (Rem. 2:11-14). But each man's 
history does have meaning, and some men have been given clearer 
knowledge than others (Luke 12:47-48). There is a common knowl- 
edge of the law, yet there is also special knowledge of the law — histor- 
ically unique in the life of each man. Each man will be judged by the 
deeds that he has done, by every word that he has uttered (Rem. 2:6; 
Matt. 12:36). God testifies to His faithfulness to His word by distin- 
guishing every shade of evil and good in every man's life, saved or lost. 

Perhaps a biblical example can clarify these issues. God gave the 
people who dwelt in the land of Canaan an extra generation of sover- 
eignty over their land. The slave mentality of the Hebrews, with the 
exceptions of Joshua and Caleb, did not permit them to go in and con- 
quer the land. Furthermore, God specifically revealed to them that He 
would drive the people out, city by city, year by year, so that the wild 
animals could not take over the land, leaving it desolate (Ex. 
23:27-30). Did this reveal God's favor toward the Canaanites? Hardly. 
He instructed the Hebrews to destroy them, root and branch. They 
were to be driven out of their land forever (Ex. 23:32-33). Neverthe- 
less, they did receive a temporal blessing: an extra generation or more 
of peace. This kept the beasts in their place. It allowed the Hebrews to 
mature under the law of God. It also allowed the Hebrews to heap 
coals of fire on the heads of their enemies, for as God told Abraham, 
the Hebrews would not take control of the promised land in his day, 
"for the iniquity ol the Amorites is not yet full" (Gen. 15:16). During 
that final generation, the iniquity of the Amorites was filled to the 
brim. Then came destruction. 

The Canaanites did receive more than they deserved. They stayed 
in the land of their fathers for an extra generation. Were they benefici- 
aries? In the days of wandering for the Hebrews, the Canaanites were 
beneficiaries. Then the final payment, culturally speaking, came due, 
and it was exacted by God through His people, just as the Egyptians 
had learned to their woe. They cared for the land until the Hebrews 
were fit to take possession of it. As the Bible affirms, "the wealth of the 

631 



APPENDIX C 

sinner is laid up for the just" (Prov. 13 :22b). But this in no way denies 
the value of the sinner' s wealth during the period in which he controls 
it. It is a gift from God that he has anything at all. God has restrained 
the sinners from dispersing their wealth in a flurry of suicidal destruc- 
tion. He lets them serve as caretakers until that day that it is trans- 
ferred to the regenerate. 

The Hivites of Gibeon did escape destruction. They were wise 
enough to see that God's people could not be beaten. They tricked 
Joshua into making a treaty with them. The result was their perpetual 
bondage as menial laborers, but they received life, and the right to 
pursue happiness, although they forfeited liberty. They were allowed 
to live under the restraints of God' s law, a far better arrangement cul- 
turally than they had lived under before the arrival of the Hebrews. 
They became the recipients of the cultural blessings given to the 
Hebrews, and perhaps some of them became faithful to God. In that 
case, what has been a curse on all of them — servitude — became a 
means of special grace. Their deception paid off (Josh. 9). Only the 
Hivites escaped destruction (Josh. 11:20). 

In the day that Adam and Eve ate of the tree of knowledge, they 
died spiritually. God had told them they would die on that very day. 
But they did not die physically. They may or may not have been indi- 
vidually regenerated by God's Spirit. But they were the beneficiaries of 
a promise (Gen. 3:15). They were to be allowed to have children. Be- 
fore time began, God had ordained the crucifixion. Christ was in this 
sense slain from the very beginning (Rev. 13:8). God granted them 
time on earth. He extended their lease on life; had they not sinned, 
they would have been able to own eternal life. God greatly blessed 
them and their murderous son Cain with a stay of execution. God re- 
spected Christ's work on the cross. Christ became a savior to Cain — 
not a personal savior or regenerating savior, but a savior of his life. 
God granted Cain protection (Gen. 4:15), one of the tasks of a savior. 

Meaning in History 

Once again, we see that history has meaning. God has a purpose. 
He grants favors to rebels, but not because He is favorable to them. 
He respects His Son, and His Son died for the whole world (John 
3:16). He died to save the world, meaning to give it time, life, and ex- 
ternal blessings. He did not die to offer a hypothetical promise of re- 
generation to "vessels of wrath" (Rem. 9:22), but He died to become a 
savior in the same sense as that described in the first part of I Timothy 
4:10 - not a special savior, but a sustaining, restraining savior. God 
dealt mercifully with Adam and Adam's family because He had favor 
for His chosen people, those who receive the blessings of salvation. 

632 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

But this salvation is expressly historical in nature. Christ died in time 
and on earth for His people. They are regenerated in time and on 
earth. He therefore preserves the earth and gives all men, including 
rebels, time. 

With respect to God's restraint of the total depravity of men, con- 
sider His curse of the ground (Gen. 3:17-19). Man must labor in the 
sweat of his brow in order to eat. The earth gives up her fruits, but 
only through labor. Still, this common curse also involves common 
grace. Men are compelled to cooperate with each other in a world of 
scarcity if they wish to increase their income. They may be murderers 
in their hearts, but they must restrain their emotions and cooperate. 
The division of labor makes possible the specialization of production. 
This, in turn, promotes increased wealth for all those who labor. Men 
are restrained by scarcity, which appears to be a one-sided curse. Not 
so; it is equally a blessing. This is the meaning of common grace; com- 
mon curse and common grace go together. 

The cross is the best example of the fusion of grace and curse. 
Christ was totally cursed on the cross. At the same time, this was 
God's act of incomparable grace. Justice and mercy are linked at the 
cross. Christ died, thereby experiencing the curse common to all men. 
Yet through that death, Christ propitiated God. That is the source of 
common grace on earth — life, law, order, power — as well as the source 
of special grace. The common curse of the cross — death — led to spe- 
cial grace for God's elect, yet it also is the source of that common 
grace which makes history possible. Christ suffered the "first death," 
not to save His people from the first death, and not to save the unre- 
generate from the second death of the lake of fire. He suffered the first 
death to satisfy the penalty of sin-the first death (which Adam did 
not immediately pay, since he did not die physically on the day that he 
sinned) and the second death (God's elect will never perish). 

At some time in the future, God will cease to restrain men's evil 
(II Thess. 2:6-12). As He gave up Israel to their lusts (Ps. 81:12; 
106:15), so shall He give upon the unregenerate who are presently held 
back from part of the evil that they would do. This does not necessar- 
ily mean that the unregenerate will then crush the people of God. In 
fact, it means precisely the opposite. When God ceased to restrain 
Israel, Israel was scattered. (True, for a time things went badly for 
God's prophets.) But the very act of releasing them from His restraint 
allowed God to let them fill up their own cup of iniquity. The end 
result of God's releasing Israel was their fall into iniquity, rebellion, 
and impotence (Acts 7:42-43). They were scattered by the Assyrians, 
the Babylonians, and finally the Remans. The Christian church 
became the heir to God's kingdom (Matt. 21:43). The Remans, too, 

633 



APPENDIX C 

were given up to their own lusts (Rem. 1:24, 26, 28). Though it took 
three centuries, they were finally replaced by the Christians. The em- 
pire collapsed. The Christians picked up the pieces. 

When God ceases to restrain men from the evil that they are cap- 
able of committing, it seals their doom. Separated from restraint, they 
violate the work of the law written in their hearts. Separated from 
God's law, men lose God's tool of cultural dominion. Men who see 
themselves as being under law can then use the law to achieve their 
ends. Antinomians rush headlong into impotence, for, denying that 
they are under law and law's restraints, they throw away the crucial 
tool of external conquest and external blessings. They rebel and are 
destroyed. 

Wheat and Tares 

The parable of the tares is instructive in dealing with the question: 
Does history reveal a progressive separation between the saved and the 
lost? The parable begins with the field which is planted with wheat, 
but which is sown with tares by an enemy during the night (Matt. 
13:24-30, 36-43). The parable refers to the kingdom of God, not to the 
institutional church. "The field is the world," Christ explained (Matt. 
13:38). The good wheat, the children of God, now must operate in a 
world in which the tares, the unregenerate, are operating. The servants 
(angels) instantly recognize the difference, but they are told not to 
yank up the tares yet. Such a violent act would destroy the wheat by 
plowing up the field. To preserve the growing wheat, the owner allows 
the tares to develop. What is preserved is historical development. Only 
at the end of the world is a final separation made. Until then, for the 
sake of the wheat, the tares are not ripped out. 

The rain falls on both the wheat and the tares. Tne sun shines on 
both. The blight hits both, and so do the locusts. Common grace and 
common curse: the law of God brings both in history. An important 
part of historical development is man's fulfillment of the dominion 
covenant. New productive techniques can be implemented through the 
common grace of God, once the care of the field is entrusted to men. 
The regularities of nature still play a role, but increasingly fertilizers, 
irrigation systems, regular care, scientific management, and even 
satellite surveys are part of the life of the field. Men exercise increasing 
dominion over the world. A question then arises: If the devil's follow- 
ers rule, will they care tenderly for the needs of the godly? Will they 
exercise dominion for the benefit of the wheat, so to speak? On the 
other hand, will the tares be cared for by the Christians? If Christians 
rule, what happens to the unrighteous? 

This is the problem of differentiation in history. Men are not pas- 

634 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

sive. They are commanded to be active, to seek dominion over nature 
(Gen. 1:28; 9:1-7). They are to manage the field. As both the good and 
the bad work out their God-ordained destinies, what kind of develop- 
ment can be expected? Who prospers most, the saved or the lost? Who 
becomes dominant? 

The final separation comes at the end of time. Until then, the two 
groups must share the same world. If wheat and tares imply slow 
growth to maturity, then we have to conclude that the radically discon- 
tinuous event of separation will not mark the time of historical devel- 
opment. It is an event of the last day: the final judgment. It is a discon- 
tinuous event that is the capstone of historical continuity. The death 
and resurrection of Christ was the last historically significant event 
that properly can be said to be discontinuous (possibly the day of 
Pentecost could serve as the last earth-shaking, kingdom-shaking 
event). The next major eschatological discontinuity y is the day of judg- 
ment. So we should expect growth in our era, the kind of growth in- 
dicated by the agricultural parables. 5 

What must be stressed is the element of continuous development. 
"The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a 
man took and sowed in his field: Which indeed is the least of all seeds: 
but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs, and becometh a 
tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches there- 
of (Matt. 13:31-32). As this kingdom comes into maturity, there is no 
physical separation between saved and lost. That total separation will 
come only at the end of time. There can be major changes, even as the 
seasons speed up or retard growth, but we should not expect a radical 
separation. 

While I do not have the space to demonstrate the point, this means 
that the separation spoken of by premillennialists - the Rapture - is 
not in accord with the parables of the kingdom. The Rapture comes at 
the end of time. The "wheat" cannot be removed from the field until 
that final day, when we are caught up to meet Christ in the clouds 
(I Thess. 4:17). There is indeed a Rapture, but it comes at the end of 
time - when the reapers (angels) harvest the wheat and the tares. There 
is a Rapture, but it is a postmillennial Rapture. 

Why a postmillennial Rapture, the amillennialist may say? Why 
not simply point out that the Rapture comes at the end of time and let 
matters drop? The answer is important: We must deal with the ques- 
tion of the development of the wheat and tares. We must see that this 
process of time leads to Christian victory on earth and in time. 



5,. Gary North, Moses and Pharaoh: Dominion Religion vs. Power Religion 
(Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics, 1985), ch. 12: "Continuity 
and Revolution." 

635 



APPENDIX C 

Knowledge and Dominion 

Isaiah 32 is a neglected portion of Scripture in our day. It informs 
us of a remarkable day that is coming. It is a day of "epistemological 
self-consciousness," to use Cornelius Van Til's phrase. It is a day when 
men will know God's standards and apply them accurately to the his- 
torical situation. It is not a day beyond the final judgment, for it 
speaks of churls as well as liberal people. Yet it cannot be a day inaug- 
urated by a radical separation between saved and lost (the Rapture), 
for such a separation comes only at the end of time. This day will 
come before Christ returns physically to earth in judgment. We read in 
the first eight verses: 

Behold, a king shall reign in righteousness, and princes shall 
rule in judgment. And a man shall be as an hiding place from the 
wind, and a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry 
place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land. And the 
eyes of them that see shall not be dim, and the ears of them that 
hear shall hearken. The heart also of the rash shall understand 
knowledge, and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to 
speak plainly. The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor 
the churl said to be bountiful. For the vile person will speak vil- 
lany, and his heart will work iniquity, to practise hypocrisy, and 
to utter error against the Lord , to make empty the soul of the 
hungry, and he will cause the drink of the thirsty to fail. The in- 
struments also of the churl are evil; he deviseth wicked devices to 
destroy the poor with lying words, even when the needy speaketh 
right. But the liberal deviseth liberal things: and by liberal things 
shall he stand. 

To repeat, "The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the 
churl said to be bountiful" (v. 5). Churls persist in their churlishness; 
liberal men continue to be gracious. It does not say that all churls will 
be converted, but it also does not say that the liberals shall be 
destroyed. The two exist together. But the language of promise in- 
dicates that Isaiah knew full well that in his day (and in our day), 
churls are called liberal and vice versa. Men refuse to apply their 
knowledge of God' s standards to the world i;n which they live. But it 
shall not always be thus. 

At this point, we face two crucial questions. The answers separate 
many Christian commentators. First, should we expect this knowledge 
to come instantaneously? Second, when this prophesied world of epis- 
temological self-consciousness finally dawns, which group will be the 
earthly victors, churls or liberals? 

636 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

The amillennialist must answer that this parallel development of 
knowledge is gradual. The postmillenialist agrees. The premillennialist 
must dissent. The premil position is that the day of self-awareness 
comes only after the Rapture and the establishment subsequently of 
the earthly kingdom, with Christ ruling on earth in person. The amil 
position sees no era of pre-consummation, pre-final judgment right- 
eousness. Therefore, he must conclude that the growth in self-aware- 
ness does separate the saved from the lost culturally, but since there is 
no coming era of godly victory culturally, the amillennialist has to say 
that this ethical and epistemological separation leads to the defeat of 
Christians on the battlefields of culture. Evil will triumph before the 
final judgment, and since this process is continuous, the decline into 
darkness must be part of the process of differentiation over time. This 
increase in self-knowledge therefore leads to the victory of Satan's 
forces over the church. 

The postmillennialist categorically rejects such a view of knowl- 
edge. As the ability of Christians to make accurate, God-honoring 
judgments in history increases over time, more authority is transferred 
to them. As pagans lose their ability to make such judgments, as a 
direct result of their denial of and war against biblical law, authority 
will be removed from them, just as it was removed from Israel in 70 
a.d. True knowledge in the postmillennial framework leads to blessing 
in history, not a curse. It leads to the victory of God' s people, not their 
defeat. But the amillennialist has to deny this. The increase of true 
self-knowledge is a curse for Christians in the amillennial system. Van 
Til makes this fundamental in his book on common grace-his only 
systematically erroneous and debilitating book. 

Van Til's A millennial Version of Common Grace 

We now return to the question of common grace. The slow, down- 
ward drift of culture parallels the growth in self-awareness, says the 
amillennialist. This has to mean that common grace is to be with- 
drawn as time progresses. The restraining hand of God will be pro- 
gressively removed. Since the amillennialist believes that things get 
worse before the final judgment, he has to see common grace as earlier 
grace (assuming he admits the existence of common grace at all). This 
has been stated most forcefully by Van Til, who holds a doctrine of 
common grace and who is an amillennialist: 

All common grace is earlier grace. Its commonness lies in its 
earliness. It pertains not merely to the lower dimensions of life. 
It pertains to all dimensions of life, but to all these dimensions 
ever decreasingly as the time of history goes on. At the very first 

637 



APPENDIX C 

stage of history there is much common grace. There is a com- 
mon good nature under the common favor of God. But this 
creation-grace requires response. It cannot remain what it is. It 
is conditional. Differentiation must set in and does set in. It 
comes first in the form of a common rejection of God. Yet com- 
mon grace continues; it is on a "lower" level now; it is 
long-suffering that men may be led to repentance. . . . Common 
grace will diminish still more in the further course of history. 
With every conditional act the remaining significance of the con- 
ditional is reduced. God allows men to follow the path of their 
self-chosen rejection of Him more rapidly than ever toward the 
final consummation. God increases His attitude of wrath upon 
the reprobate as time goes on, until at the end of time, at the 
great consummation of history, their condition has caught up 
with their state. 6 

Van Til affirms the reality of history, yet it is the history of contin- 
uous decline. The unregenerate become increasingly powerful as com- 
mon grace declines. But why? Why should the epistemological self- 
awareness described in Isaiah 32 necessarily lead to defeat for the 
Christians? By holding to a doctrine of common grace which involves 
the idea of the common favor of God toward all creatures (except 
Satan, says Van Til), he then argues that this favor is withdrawn, leav- 
ing the unregenerate a free hand to attack God's elect. If common 
grace is linked with God's favor, and God's favor steadily declines, 
then that other aspect of common grace, namely, God' s restraint, must 
also be withdrawn. Furthermore, the third feature of common grace, 
civic righteousness, must also disappear. Van Til's words are quite 
powerful: 

But when all the reprobate are epistemologically self- 
conscious, the crack of doom has come. The fully self-conscious 
reprobate will do all he can in every dimension to destroy the 
people of God. So while we seek with all our power to hasten the 
process of differentiation in every dimension we are yet thank- 
ful, on the other hand, for "the day of grace," the day of unde- 
veloped differentiation. Such tolerance as we receive on the part 
of the world is due to this fact that we live in the earlier, rather 
than in the later, stage of history. And such influence on the pub- 
lic situation as we can effect, whether in society or in state, pre- 
supposes this undifferentiated stage of development.7 



6. Van Til, Common Grace, pp. 82-83. 

7 . Ibid., p. 85. 

638 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

Consider the implications of what Van Til is saying. History is an 
earthly threat to Christian man. Why? His amil argument is that com- 
mon grace is earlier grace. It declines over time. Why? Because God's 
attitude of favor declines over time with respect to the unregenerate. 
With the decline of God's favor, the other benefits of common grace 
are lost. Evil men become more thoroughly evil. 

Van Til's argument is the generally accepted one in Reformed 
circles. His is the standard statement of the common grace position. 
Yet as the reader should grasp by now, it is deeply flawed. It begins 
with false assumptions: 1) that common grace implies common favor; 
2) that this common grace-favor is reduced over time; 3) that this loss 
of favor necessarily tears down the foundations of civic righteousness 
within the general culture; 4) that the amillennial vision of the future is 
accurate. Thus, he concludes that the process of differentiation is lead- 
ing to the impotence of Christians in every sphere of life, and that we 
can be thankful for having lived in the period of "earlier" grace, mean- 
ing greater common grace. 

It is ironic that Van Til's view of common grace is implicitly op- 
posed to the postmillennialism of R. J. Rushdoony, yet his view is 
equally opposed to the amillennialism of the anti-Chalcedon amillen- 
nial theologian (and former colleague of Van Til's), Meredith G. 
Kline, who openly rejects Rushdoony's postmillennial eschatology. 8 It 
is doubly ironic that Rushdoony has adopted Van Til's anti- 



8. Kline rejects Van Til's assertion that common grace declines over time. 
Kline says that this is what theChalcedonpostmillennialists teach - which sim- 
ply is not true, nor even implied by their eschatology - and in doing so Kline 
breaks radically with Van Til. It is unlikely that Kline even recognizes the anti- 
Van Til implications of what he has written. "Along with the hermeneutical de- 
ficiencies of Chalcedon's millennialism there is a fundamental theological 
problem that besets it. And here we come around again to Chalcedon's con- 
founding the biblical concepts of the holy and the common. As we have seen, 
Chalcedon's brand of postmillennialism envisages as the climax of the millen- 
nium something more than a high degree of success in the church's evangelistic 
mission to the world. An additional millennial prospect (one which they par- 
ticularly relish) is that of a material prosperity and a world-wide eminence and 
dominance of Christ's established kingdom on earth, with a divinely enforced 
submission of the nations to the world government of the Christocracy. . . . 
The insuperable theological objection to any and every such chiliastic con- 
struction is that it entails the assumption of a premature eclipse of the order of 
common grace. ... In thus postulating the termination of the common grace 
order before the consummation, Chalcedon's postmillennialism in effect attri- 
butes unfaithfulness to God, for God committed himself in his ancient cove- 
nant to maintain that order for as long as the earth endures." Meredith G. 
Kline, "Comments on an Old-New Error," Westminster Theological Journal, 
XLI (Fall 1978), pp. 183, 184. 

639 



APPENDIX C 

postmillennial version of common grace, meaning "earlier grace." 9 

Van Til's amillennism colors his whole doctrine of common grace. 
Perhaps unconsciously, he selectively structured the biblical evidence 
on this question in order to make it conform with his Netherlands 
amillennial heritage. This is why his entire concept of common grace is 
incorrect. It is imperative that we scrap the concept of "earlier grace" 
and adopt a doctrine of common (crumbs for the dogs) grace. 

A Postmillennial Response 

In response to Van Til, I offer three criticisms. First, God does not 
favor the unregenerate at any time after the rebellion of man. Man is 
totally depraved, and there is nothing in him deserving praise or favor, 
nor does God look favorably on him. God grants the unregenerate 
man favors (not favor) in order to heap coals of fire on his head (if he 
is not part of the elect) or else to call him to repentance (which God' s 
special grace accomplishes). Thus, God is uniformly hostile to the 
rebel throughout history. God hates unregenerate men with a holy 
hatred from beginning to end. "Earlier" has nothing to do with it. 

Second, once the excess theological baggage of God's supposed 
favor toward the unregenerate is removed, the other two issues can be 
discussed: God's restraint and man's civic righteousness. The activity 
of God's Spirit is important in understanding the nature of God's re- 
straint, but we are told virtually nothing of the operation of the Spirit. 
What we are told is that the la w of God restrains men. They do the 
work of the law written on their hearts. This law is the primary means 
of God's external blessings (Deut. 28:1-14); rebellion against His law 
brings destruction (Deut. 28:15-68). Therefore., as the reign of biblical 
law is extended by means of the preaching of the whole counsel of 
God, as the law is written in the hearts of men (Jer. 31:33-34; Heb. 



9. It is one of the oddities in the Christian reconstruction movement that 
R. J. Rushdoony categorically rejects amillennialism, calling it "impotent re- 
ligion" and "blasphemy," and yet he affirms the validity of Van Til's common 
grace position, calling for the substitution of Van T il's "earlier grace" concept 
for "common grace." Rushdoony's anti-amillennial (and therefore by implica- 
tion anti-Van Til) essay appeared in The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, 
III (Winter 1976-77): "Postmillennialism versus Impotent Religion." His 
pro-"earlier grace" statement appeared in his review of E. L. Hebden Taylor's 
book, The Christian Philosophy of Law, Politics and the State, in The West- 
minster Theological Journal, XXX (Nov. 1967): "A concept of 'earlier grace' 
makes remnants of justice, right, and community tenable; a concept of 'com- 
mon grace' does not" (p. 100). "The term 'common grace' has become a shib- 
boleth of Dutch theology and a passageway across the Jordan and into Re- 
formed territory of those who can feign the required accent. Has not the time 
come to drop the whole concept and start afresh?" (p. 101). 

640 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

8:10-11; 10:16), and as the unregenerate come under the sway and influ- 
ence of the law, common grace must increase, not decrease. The cen- 
tral issue is the restraint by God inherent in the work of the law. This 
work is in every man's heart. 

Remember, this has nothing to do with the supposed favor of God 
toward mankind in general. It is simply that as Christians become 
more faithful to biblical law, they receive more bread from the hand of 
God. As they increase the amount of bread on their tables, more 
crumbs fall to the dogs beneath. 

Third, the amillennial view of the process of separation or differen- 
tiation is seriously flawed by a lack of understanding of the power 
which biblical law confers on those who seek to abide by its standards. 
Again, we must look at Deuteronomy, chapter eight. Conformity to 
the precepts of the law brings external blessings. The blessings can 
(though need not) serve as a snare and a temptation, for men may for- 
get the source of their blessings. They can forget God, claim auton- 
omy, and turn away from the law. This leads to destruction. The form- 
erly faithful people are scattered. Thus, the paradox of Deuteronomy 
8: covenantal faithfulness to the law - external blessings by God in re- 
sponse to faithfulness - temptation to rely on the blessings as if they 
were the product of man's hands - judgment. The blessings can lead 
to disaster and impotence. Therefore, adherence to the terms of bibli- 
cal law is basic for external success. 

Ethics and Dominion 

As men become epistemologically self-conscious, they must face 
up to reality - God's reality. Ours is a moral universe. It is governed by 
a law-order which reflects the very being of God. When men finally 
realize who the churls are and who the liberals are, they have made a 
significant discovery. They recognize the relationship between God's 
standards and the ethical decisions of men. In short, they come to 
grips with the law of God. The law is written in the hearts of Chris- 
tians. The work of the law is written in the hearts of all men. The 
Christians are therefore increasingly in touch with the source of earthly 
power: biblical law. To match the power of the Christians, the unre- 
generate must conform their actions externally to the law of God as 
preached by Christians, the work of which they already have in their 
hearts. The unregenerate are therefore made far more responsible be- 
fore God, simply because they have more knowledge. They desire 
power. Christians will some day possess cultural power through their 
adherence to biblical law. Therefore, unregenerate men will have to 
imitate special covenantal faithfulness by adhering to the demands of 
God's external covenants. The unregenerate will thereby bring down 

641 



APPENDIX C 

the final wrath of God upon their heads, even as they gain external 
blessings due to their increased conformity to the external require- 
ments of biblical law. At the end of time, they revolt. 

The unregenerate have two choices: Conform themselves to biblical 
law, or at least to the work of the law written on their hearts, or, second, 
abandon law and thereby abandon power. They can gain power only 
on God's terms: acknowledgement of and conformity to God's law. 
There is no other way. Any turning from the law brings impotence, 
fragmentation, and despair. Furthermore, it leaves those with a com- 
mitment to law in the driver's seat. Increasing differentiation over 
time, therefore, does not lead to the impotence of the Christians. It 
leads to their victory culturally. They see the implications of the law 
more clearly. So do their enemies. The unrighteous can gain access to 
the blessings only by accepting God's moral universe as it is. 

The Hebrews were told to separate themselves from the people and 
the gods of the land. Those gods were the gods of Satan, the gods of 
chaos, dissolution, and cyclical history. The pagan world was faithful 
to the doctrine of cycles: there can be no straight-line progress. But the 
Hebrews were told differently. If they were faithful, God said, they 
would not suffer the burdens of sickness, and no one and no animal 
would suffer miscarriages (Ex. 23:24-26). Special grace leads to a com- 
mitment to the law; the commitment to God's law permits God to re- 
duce the common curse element of natural law, leaving proportion- 
ately more common grace - the reign of beneficent common law. The 
curse of nature can be steadily reduced, but only if men conform 
themselves to revealed law or to the works of the law in their hearts. 
The blessing comes in the form of a more productive, less scarcity- 
dominated nature. There can be positive feedback in the relation be- 
tween law and blessing: the blessings will confirm God's faithfulness to 
His law, which in turn will lead to greater convenantal faithfulness 
(Deut.8:18). This is the answer to the paradox of Deuteronomy 8: it 
need not become a cyclical spiral. Of course, special grace is required 
to keep a people faithful in the long run. Without special grace, the 
temptation to forget the source of wealth takes over, and the end result 
is destruction. This is why, at the end of the millennial age, the unre- 
generate try once again to assert their autonomy from God. They at- 
tack the church of the faithful. They exercise power. And the crack of 
doom sounds - for the unregenerate. 

Differentiation and Progress 

The process of differentiation is not constant over time. It ebbs and 
flows. Its general direction is toward epistemological self-consciousness. 
But Christians are not always faithful, any more than the Hebrews 

642 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

were in the days of the judges. The early church defeated Rome, and 
then the secular remnants of Rome compromised the church. The Refor- 
mation launched a new era of cultural growth, the Counter-Reformation 
struck back, and the secularism of the Renaissance swallowed up 
both - for a time. This is not cyclical history, for history is linear. 
There was a creation, a fall, a people called out of bondage, an incar- 
nation, a resurrection, Pentecost. There will be a day of epistemologi- 
cal self-consciousness, as promised in Isaiah 32. There will be a final 
rebellion and judgment. There has been a Christian nation called the 
United States. There has been a secular nation called the United 
States. (The dividing line was the Civil War, or War of Southern Seces- 
sion, or War between the States, or War of Northern Aggression — 
take your pick.) Back and forth, ebb and flow, but with a long-range 
goal. 

There has been progress. Look at the Apostles' Creed. Then look 
at the Westminster Confession of Faith. Only a fool could deny prog- 
ress. There has been a growth in wealth, in knowledge, and culture. 
What are we to say, that technology as such is the devil's, that since 
common grace has been steadily withdrawn, the modern world's de- 
velopment is the creative work of Satan (since God's common grace 
cannot account for this progress)? Is Satan creative - autonomously 
creative? If not, from whence comes our wealth, our knowledge, and 
our power? Is it not from God? Is not Satan the great imitator? But 
whose progress has he imitated? Whose cultural development has he 
attempted to borrow, twist, and destroy? There has been progress 
since the days of Noah — not straight-line progress, not pure com- 
pound growth, but progress nonetheless. Christianity produced it, sec- 
ularism borrowed it, and today we seem to be at another crossroad: 
Can the Christians sustain what they began, given their compromises 
with secularism? And can the secularists sustain what they and the 
Christians have constructed, now that their spiritual capital is running 
low, and the Christians' cultural bank account is close to empty? 

Christians and secularists today are, in the field of education and 
other "secular" realms, like a pair of drunks who lean on each other in 
order not to fall down. We seem to be in the "blessings unto tempta- 
tion" stage, with "rebellion unto destruction" looming ahead. It has 
happened before. It can happen again. In this sense, it is the lack of 
epistemological self-consciousness that seems to be responsible for the 
reduction of common grace. Yet it is Van Til's view that the increase of 
epistemological self-consciousness is responsible for, or at least paral- 
lels, the reduction of common grace. Amillennialism has crippled his 
analysis of common grace. So has his equation of God's gifts and 
God's supposed favor to mankind in general. 

643 



APPENDIX C 

The separation between the wheat and the tares is progressive. It is 
not a straight-line progression. Blight hits one and then the other. 
Sometimes it hits both at once. Sometimes the sun and rain help both 
to grow at the same time. But there is maturity. The tares grow unto 
final destruction, and the wheat grows unto final blessing. In the 
meantime, both have roles to play in God's plan for the ages. At least 
the tares help keep the soil from eroding. Better tares than the destruc- 
tion of the field, at least for the present. They serve God, despite them- 
selves. There has been progress for both wheat and tares. Greek and 
Roman science became static; Christian concepts of optimism and an 
orderly universe created modern science. Now the tares run the scien- 
tific world, but for how long? Until a war? Until the concepts of 
meaningless Darwinian evolution and modern indeterminate physics 
destroy the concept of regular law - the foundation of all science? 

How long can we go on like this? Answer: until epistemological 
self-consciousness brings Christians back to the law of God. Then the 
pagans must imitate them or quit. Obedience to God alone brings 
long-term dominion. 

Law and Grace 

The dual relationship between common law and common curse is a 
necessary backdrop for God's 'plan of the ages. Take, for example, the 
curse of Adam. Adam and his heirs are burdened with frail bodies that 
grow sick and die. Initially, there was a longer life expectancy for man- 
kind. The longest life recorded in the Bible, that given to Methuselah, 
Noah's grandfather, was 969 years. Methuselah died in the year that 
the great flood began. 10 Thus, as far as human life is concerned, the 
greatest sign of God's common grace was given to men just before the 
greatest removal of common grace recorded in history. 

This is extremely significant for the thesis of this essay. The exten- 
sion of common grace to man — the external blessings of God that are 
given to mankind in general - is a prelude to a great curse for the unre- 
generate. As we read in the eighth chapter of Deuteronomy, as well as 
in the twenty-eighth chapter, men can be and are lured into a snare by 



10. Methuselah was 969 years old when he died (Gen. 5:27). He was 187 
years old when his son Lamech was born (5:25) and 369 years old when 
Lamech's son Noah was born (5:28-29). Noah was 600 years old at the time of 
the great flood (7:6). Therefore, from the birth of Noah, when Methuselah 
was 369, until the flood, 600 years later, Methuselah lived out his years (369 + 
600 = 969). The Bible does not say that Methuselah perished in the flood, but 
only that he died in the year of the flood. This is such a remarkable chronology 
that the burden of proof is on those who deny the father-to-son relationship in 
these three generations, arguing instead for an Unstated gap in the chronology. 

644 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

looking upon the external gifts from God while forgetting the heav- 
enly source of the gifts and the covenantal terms under which the gifts 
were given. The gift of long life was given to mankind in general, not 
as a sign of God's favor, but as a prelude to His almost total destruc- 
tion of the seed of Adam. Only His special grace to Noah and his fam- 
ily preserved mankind. 

Thus, the mere existence of external blessing is no proof of a fav- 
orable attitude toward man on the part of God. In the first stage, that 
of covenantal faithfulness, God's special grace is extended widely 
within a culture. The second state, that of external blessings in 
response to covenantal faithfulness, is intended to reinforce men's 
faith in the reality and validity of God's covenants (Deut. 8:18). But 
that second stage can lead to a third stage, covenantal or ethical for- 
getfulness. The key fact which must be borne in mind is that this third 
stage cannot be distinguished from the second stage in terms of meas- 
urements of the blessings (economic growth indicators, for example). 
An increase of external blessings should lead to the positive feedback 
of a faithful culture: victory unto victory. But it can lead to stage 
three, namely, forgetfulness. This leads to stage four, destruction. It 
therefore requires special grace to maintain the "faithfulness-blessing- 
faithfulness-blessing . .." relationship of positive feedback and com- 
pound growth. But common grace plays a definite role in reinforcing 
men's commitment to the law-order of God. 

Everyone in the Hebrew commonwealth, including the stranger 
who was within the gates, could benefit from the increase in external 
blessings. Therefore, the curse aspect of the "common grace-common 
curse" relationship can be progressively removed, and common grace 
either increases, or else the mere removal of common cursing makes it 
appear that common grace is increasing. (Better theologians than I can 
debate this point.) 

The Reinforcement of Special Grace 

Nevertheless, without special grace being extended by God - with- 
out continual conversions of men — the positive feedback of Deuteron- 
omy 8 cannot be maintained. A disastrous reduction of blessings can 
be counted on by those who are not regenerate if their numbers are be- 
coming dominant in the community. When regenerate Lot was re- 
moved from Sodom, and the unregenerate men who had been set up 
for destruction by God no longer were protected by Lot's presence 
among them, their crack of doom sounded (Gen. 18, 19). And the 
effects were felt in Lot's family, for his wife looked back and suffered 
the consequences of her disobedience (19:26), and his daughters com- 
mitted sin (19:30-3 8). But it had been Lot's presence among them that 

645 



APPENDIX C 

had held off destruction (19:21-22). 

The same was true of Noah. Until the ark was completed, the 
world was safe from the great flood. The people seemed to be prosper- 
ing. Methuselah lived a long life, but after him, the lifespan of man- 
kind steadily declined. Aaron died at age 123 (Num. 33:39). Moses 
died at age 120 (Deut.31:2). But this longevity was not normal, even in 
their day. In a psalm of Moses, he said that "The days of our years are 
threescore years and ten; and if by reason o F strength they be four- 
score years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut 
off, and we fly away" (Ps. 90:10). The common curse of God could be 
seen even in the blessing of extra years, but long life, which is a bless- 
ing (Ex. 20:12), was being removed by God from mankind in general. 

The Book of Isaiah tells us of a future restoration of long life. This 
blessing shall be given to all men, saints and sinners. It is therefore a 
sign of extended common grace. It is a gift to mankind in general. 
Isaiah 65:20 tells us: "There shall be no more thence an infant of days, 
nor an old man that bath not filled his days: for the child shall die an 
hundred years old; but the sinner being an hundred years old shall be 
accursed." The gift of long life shall come, though the common curse 
of long life shall extend to the sinner, whose long life is simply extra 
time for him to fill up his days of iniquity. Nevertheless; the infants 
will not die, which is a fulfillment of God's promise to Israel, namely, 
the absence of miscarriages (Ex. 23:26). If there is any passage in 
Scripture that absolutely refutes the amillennial position, it is this one. 
This is not a prophecy of the New Heavens and New Earth in their 
post-judgment form, but it is a prophecy of i;he pre-judgment mani- 
festation of the preliminary stages of the New Heavens and New 
Earth - an earnest (down payment) of our expectations. There are still 
sinners in the world, and they receive long life. But to them it is an ul- 
timate curse, meaning a special curse. It is a special curse because this 
exceptionally long life is a common blessing - the reduction of the 
common curse. Again, we need the concept of common grace to give 
significance to both special grace and common curse. Common grace 
(reduced common curse) brings special curses to the rebels. 

There will be peace on earth extended to men of good will (Luke 
2:14). But this means that there will also be peace on earth extended to 
evil men. Peace is given to the just as a reward for their covenantal 
faithfulness. It is given to the unregenerate in order to heap coals of 
fire on their heads, and also in order to lure rebels living in the very 
last days into a final rebellion against God. 

Final Judgment and Common Grace 

An understanding of common grace is essential for an understand- 
ing of the final act of human history before the judgment of God. To 

646 



COMMON GRACE , ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

the extent that this essay contributes anything new to Christian theol- 
ogy, it is its contribution to an understanding of the final rebellion of 
the unregenerate. The final rebellion has been used by those opposing 
postmillennialism as final proof that there will be no faith on earth 
among the masses of men when Christ returns. The devil shall be loosed 
for a little season at the end of time, meaning his power over the na- 
tions returns to him in full strength (Rev. 20:3). However, this rebel- 
lion is short-lived. He surrounds the holy city (meaning the church of 
the faithful), only to be cut down in final judgment (Rev. 20:7-15). 
Therefore, conclude the critics of postmillennialism, there is a re- 
sounding negative answer to Christ's question: "Nevertheless when the 
Son of mar. cometh, shall he find faith on earth" (Luke 18:8)? Where, 
then, is the supposed victory? 

The doctrine of common grace provides us with the biblical an- 
swer. God's law is the main form of common grace. It is written in the 
hearts of believers, we read in Hebrews, chapters eight and ten, but 
the work of the law is written in the heart of every man. Thus, the 
work of the law is universal — common. This access to God's law is the 
foundation of the fulfilling of the dominion covenant to subdue the 
earth (Gen. 1:28). The command was given to all men through Adam; 
it was reaffirmed by God with the family of Noah (Gen. 9:1-7). God's 
promises of external blessings are conditional to man's fulfillment of 
external laws. The reason why men can gain the blessings is because 
the knowledge of the work of the law is common. This is why there 
can be outward cooperation between Christians and non-Christians 
for certain earthly ends. 

From time to time, unbelievers are enabled by God to adhere more 
closely to the work of the law that is written in their hearts. These per- 
iods of cultural adherence can last for centuries, at least with respect 
to some aspects of human culture (the arts, science, philosophy). The 
Greeks maintained a high level of culture inside the limited confines of 
the Greek city-states for a few centuries. The Chinese maintained their 
culture until it grew stagnant, in response to Confucian philosophy, in 
what we call the Middle Ages. But in the West, the ability of the unre- 
generate to act in closer conformity to the work of the law written in 
their hearts has been the result of the historical leadership provided by 
the cultural triumph of Christianity. In short, special grace increased, 
leading to an extension of common grace throughout Western culture. 
Economic growth has increased; indeed, the concept of linear, com- 
pound growth is unique to the West, and the foundations of this belief 
were laid by the Reformers who held to the eschatology known as 
postmillennialism. Longer lifespans have also appeared in the West, 
primarily due to the application of technology to living conditions. 

647 



APPENDIX C 

Applied technology is, in turn, a product of Christianity l and espe- 
cially Protestant Christianity. 12 

In the era prophesied by Isaiah, unbelievers will once again come 
to know the benefits of God's law. No longer shall they twist God's 
revelation to them. The churl shall no longer be called liberal. Law 
will be respected by unbelievers. This means that they will turn away 
from an open, consistent worship of the gods of chaos and the philos- 
ophy of ultimate randomness, including evolutionary randomness. 
They will participate in the blessings brought to them by the preaching 
of the whole counsel of God, including His law. The earth will be sub- 
dued to the glory of God, including the cultural world. Unbelievers 
will fulfil their roles in the achievement of the terms of the dominion 
covenant. 

This is why a theology that is orthodox must include a doctrine of 
common grace that is intimately related to biblical law. Law does not 
save men's souls, but it does save their bodies and their culture. Christ 
is the savior of all, especially those who are the elect (I Tim. 4:10). 

Antinomian Revivalism vs. Reconstruction 

The blessings and cultural victory taught by the Bible (and ade- 
quately commented upon by postmillennialist) will not be the prod- 
ucts of some form of pietistic, semi-monastic revivalism. The "merely 
soteriological" preaching of pietism - the salvation of souls by special 
grace - is not sufficient to bring the victories foretold in the Bible. The 
whole counsel of God must and will be preached. This means that the 
law of God will be preached. The external blessings will come in re- 
sponse to covenantal faithfulness of God's people. The majority of 
men will be converted. The unconverted will not follow their philoso- 
phy of chaos to logical conclusions, for such a philosophy leads to ulti- 
mate impotence. It throws away the tool of reco nstruction, biblical law. 

The great defect with the postmillennial revival inaugurated by 
Jonathan Edwards and his followers in the eighteenth century was 
their neglect of biblical law. They expected to see the blessings of God 



11. Stanley Jaki, The Road of Science and the Ways to God (Chicago: Uni- 
versity of Chicago Press, 1978); Science and Creation: From eternal cycles to 
an oscillating universe (Edinburgh and London: Scottish Academic Press, 
[19741 1980). 

12. Robert K. Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure (rev. ed.; New 
York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1957), ch. 18: "Puritanism, Pietism, and 
Science"; E. L. Hebden Taylor, "The Role of Puritanism-Calvinism in the Rise 
of Modern Science," The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, VI (Summer 
1979); Charles Dykes, "Medieval Speculation, Puritanism, and Modern 
Science," ibid. 

648 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

come as a result of merely soteriological preaching. Look at Edwards' 
Treatise on the Religious Affections. There is nothing on the law of 
God in culture. Page after page is filled with the words "sweet" and 
"sweetness." A diabetic reader is almost risking a relapse by reading 
this book in one sitting. The words sometimes appear four or five 
times on a page. And while Edwards was preaching the sweetness of 
God, Arminian semi-literates were "hot-gospeling" the Holy Com- 
monwealth of Connecticut into political antinomianism. 13 Where 
sweetness and emotional hot flashes are concerned, Calvinistic preach- 
ing is no match for antinomian sermons. The hoped-for revival of the 
1700s became the Arminian revivals of the early 1800s, leaving emo- 
tionally burned-over districts, cults, and the abolitionist movement as 
their devastating legacy. Because the postmillennial preaching of the 
Edwardians was culturally antinomian and pietistic, it crippled the 
remnants of Calvinistic political order in the New England colonies, 
helping to produce a vacuum that Arminianism and then Unitarianism 
filled. 

Progress culturally, economically, and politically is intimately 
linked to the extension and application of biblical law. The blessings 
promised in Remans, chapter eleven, concerning the effects of the 
promised conversion of Israel (not necessarily the state of Israel) to 
the gospel, will be in part the product of biblical law. 14 But these bless- 



13. On the opposition to Edwards' toleration of revivalism, not from theolog- 
ical liberals but from orthodox Calvinistic pastors, see Richard L. Bushman, 
From Puritan to Yankee (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University 
Press, 1967). Bushman also explains how the Great Awakening was a disaster 
for the legal remnants of biblical law in the colony of Connecticut. The politi- 
cal order was forced into theological neutralism, which in turn aided the rise of 
Deism and liberalism. 

14. John Murray's excellent commentary, The Epistle to the Remans 
(Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1965), contains an extensive analysis of 
Remans 11, the section dealing with the future conversion of the Jews. Murray 
stresses that God's redrafting in of Israel leads to covenantal blessings unparal- 
leled in human history. But the Israel referred to in Remans 1 1, argues Murray, 
is not national or political Israel, but the natural seed of Abraham. This seems 
to mean genetic Israel. 

A major historical problem appears at this point. There is some evidence 
(though not conclusive) that the bulk of those known today as Askenazi Jews 
are the heirs of a converted tribe of Turkish people, the Khazars. It is well- 
known among European history scholars that such a conversion took place 
around 740 a.d. The Eastern European and Russian Jews may have come 
from this stock. They have married other Jews, however: the Sephardic or 
diaspora Jews who fled primarily to western Europe. The Yemenite Jews, who 
stayed in the land of Palestine, also are descendants of Abraham. The 
counter-evidence against this thesis of the Khazars as modern Jews is primarily 
linguistic: Yiddish does not bear traces of any Turkic language. On the 

649 



APPENDIX C 

ings do not necessarily include universal regeneration. The blessings 
only require the extension of Christian culture. For the long-term 
progress of culture, of course, this increase of common grace (or re- 
duction of the common curse) must be reinforced (rejuvenated and re- 
newed) by special grace — conversions. But the blessings can remain 
for a generation or more after special grace has been removed, and as 
far as the external benefits can be measured, it will not be possible to 
tell whether the blessings are part of the positive feedback program 
(Deut.8:18) or & prelude to God's judgment (Deut. 8:19-20). God 
respects His conditional, external covenants. External conformity to 
His law gains external blessings. These, in the last analysis (and at the 
last judgment), produce coals for unregenerate heads. 

Universal Regeneration ? 

The postmillennial system requires a doctrine of common grace and 
common curse. It does not require a doctrine of universal regeneration 
during the period of millennial blessings. In fact, no postmillennial 
Calvinist can afford to be without a doctrine of common grace - one 
which links external blessings to the fulfillment of external covenants. 
There has to be a period of external blessings during the final genera- 
tion. Something must hold that culture together so that Satan can 
once again go forth and deceive the nations. The Calvinist denies that 
men can "lose their salvation," meaning their regenerate status. The 
rebels are not "formerly regenerate" men. But they are men with 
power, or at least the trappings of power. They are powerful enough to 
delude themselves that they can destroy the people of God. And 
power, as I have tried to emphasize throughout this essay, is not the 
product of antinomian or chaos-oriented philosophy. The very exist- 
ence of a military chain of command demands a concept of law and 
order. Satan commands an army on that final day. 

The postmillennial vision of the future paints a picture of historic- 
ally incomparable blessings. It also tells of a final rebellion that leads 
to God's total and final judgment. Like the long-lived men in the days 
of Methuselah, judgment comes upon them in the midst of power, 
prosperity, and external blessings. God has been gracious to them all 
to the utmost of His common grace. He has been gracious in response 

to their covenantal faithfulness to His civil law -order, and He has been 

kingdom of the Khazars, see Arthur Koestler, The Thirteenth Tribe: The 
Khazar Empire and Its Heritage (New York: Random House, 1976). 

If the Israel referred to in Remans 1 1 is primarily genetic, then it may not 
be necessary that all Jews be converted. What, then, is the Jew in Remans 11? 
Covenantal? I wrote to Murray in the late 1960s to get his opinion on the impli- 
cations of the Khazars for his exegesis of Remans 11, but he did not respond. 

650 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

gracious in order to pile the maximum possible pile of coals on their 
heads. In contrast to Van Til's amillennialist vision of the future, we 
must say: When common grace is extended to its maximum limits pos- 
sible in history, then the crack of doom has come - doom for the 
rebels. 

Epistemological Self-Consciousness and Cooperation 

Van Til writes: "But when all the reprobate are epistemologically 
self-conscious, the crack of doom has come. The fully self-conscious 
reprobate will do all he can in every dimension to destroy the people of 
God." Yet Van Til has written in another place that the rebel against 
God is like a little child who has to sit on his father's lap in order to 
slap his face. What, then, can be meant by the concept of increasing 
epistemological self-consciousness? 

As the wheat and tares grow to maturity, the amillennialist argues, 
the tares become stronger and stronger culturally, while the wheat 
becomes weaker and weaker. Consider what is being said. As Chris- 
tians work out their own salvation with fear and trembling, improving 
their creeds, improving their cooperation with each other on the basis 
of agreement about the creeds, as they learn about the law of God as it 
applies in their own era, as they become skilled in applying the law of 
God that they have learned about, they become culturally impotent. 
They become infertile, also, it would seem. They do not become fruit- 
ful and multiply. Or if they do their best to follow this commandment, 
they are left without the blessing of God -a blessing which He has 
promised to those who follow the laws He has established. In short, 
the increase of epistemological self-consciousness on the part of Chris- 
tians leads to cultural impotence. 

I am faced with an unpleasant conclusion: the amillennialist ver- 
sion of the common grace doctrine is inescapably antinomian. It 
argues that God no longer respects His covenantal law-order, that 
Deuteronomy's teaching about covenantal law is invalid in New Testa- 
ment times. The only way for the amillennialist to avoid the charge of 
antinomianism is for him to abandon the concept of increasing episte- 
mological self-consciousness. He must face the fact that to achieve 
cultural impotence, Christians therefore must not increase in knowl- 
edge and covenantal faithfulness. (Admittedly, the condition of twen- 
tieth-century Christianity does appear to enforce this attitude about 
epistemological self-consciousness among Christians.) 

Consider the other half of Van Til's dictum. As the epistemological 
self-consciousness of the unregenerate increases, and they adhere 
more and more to their epistemological premises of the origins of mat- 
ter out of chaos, and the ultimate return of all matter into pure ran- 

651 



APPENDIX C 

domness, this chaos philosophy makes them confident, The Christian 
is humble before God, but confident before the creation which he is to 
subdue. This confidence leads the Christian into defeat and ultimate 
disaster, say amillennialists, who believe in increasing epistemological 
self-consciousness. On the other hand, the rebel is arrogant before 
God and claims that all nature is ruled by the meaningless laws of 
probability - ultimate chaos. By immersing themselves in the philoso- 
phy of chaos, the unbelievers are able to emerge totally victorious 
across the whole face of the earth, says the amillennialist, a victory 
which is called to a halt only by the physics' 1 intervention of Jesus 
Christ at the final judgment. A commitment to lawlessness, in the 
amillennial version of common grace, leads to external victory. How 
can these things be? 

A millennialism Has Things Backwards 

It should be clear by now that the amillennialist version of the rela- 
tionship between biblical law and the creation is completely back- 
wards. No doubt Satan wishes it were a true version. He wants his fol- 
lowers to believe it. But how can a consistent Christian believe it? 
How can a Christian believe that adherence to biblical law produces 
cultural impotence, while commitment to philosophical chaos - the re- 
ligion of satanic revolution - leads to cultural victory? There is no 
doubt in my mind that the amillennialists do not want to teach such a 
doctrine, yet that is where their amillennial pessimism inevitably leads. 
Dutch Calvinists preach the cultural mandate (dominion covenant), 
but they simultaneously preach that it cannot be fulfilled. But biblical 
law is basic to the fulfillment of the cultural mandate. Therefore, the 
amillennialist who preaches the obligation of trying to fulfil the cul- 
tural mandate without biblical law thereby plunges himself either into 
the camp of the chaos cults (mystics, revolutionaries) or into the camp 
of the natural-law, common-ground philosophers. There are only four 
possibilities: revealed law, natural law, chaos, or a mixture. 

This leads me to my next point. It is somewhat speculative and 
may not be completely accurate. It is an idea which ought to be pur- 
sued, however, to see if it is accurate. I think that the reason why the 
philosophy of Herman Dooyeweerd, the Dutch philosopher of law, 
had some temporary impact in Dutch Calvinist intellectual circles in 
the late 1960s and early 1970s is that Dooyeweerd's theory of sphere 
sovereignty — sphere laws that are not to be filled in by means of re- 
vealed, Old Testament law - is consistent with the amillennial (Dutch) 
version of the cultural mandate. Dooyeweerd's system and Dutch 
amillennialism are essentially antinomian. This is why I wrote my 1967 
essay, "Social Antinomianism," in response to the Dooyeweerdian 

652 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

professor at the Free University of Amsterdam, A. Troost.'5 

Either the Dooyeweerdians wind up as mystics, or else they try to 
create a new kind of "common-ground philosophy" to link believers 
and unbelievers. It is Dooyeweerd's outspoken resistance to Old Tes- 
tament and New Testament authority over the content of his hypothe- 
sized sphere laws that has led his increasingly radical, increasingly an- 
tinomian followers into anti-Christian paths. You cannot preach the 
dominion covenant and then turn around and deny the efficacy of bib- 
lical law in culture. Yet this is what all the Dutch adherents to common 
grace have done. They deny the cultural efficacy of biblical law, by ne- 
cessity, because their eschatological interpretations have led them to 
conclude that there can be no external, cultural victory in time and on 
earth by faithful Christians. Epistemological self-consciousness will 
increase, but things only get worse over time. 

If you preach that biblical law produces "positive feedback," both 
personally and culturally - that God rewards covenant-keepers and 
punishes covenant-breakers in time and on earth -then you are 
preaching a system of positive growth. You are preaching the domin- 
ion covenant. Only if you deny that there is any relationship between 
covenant-keeping and external success in life — a denial made explicit 
by Meredith G. Kline 16 - can you escape from the postmillennial im- 
plications of biblical law, This is why it is odd that Greg Bahnsen in- 
sists - perhaps for tactical reasons - on presenting his defense of bibli- 
cal law apart from his well-known postmillennialism. n Kline attacked 



75. Gary North, The Sinai Strategy: Economics and the Ten Command- 
ments (Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics, 1986), Appendix C: 
"Social Antinomianism." 

16. Kline says that any connection between blessings and covenant-keeping 
is, humanly speaking, random. "And meanwhile it [the common grace order] 
must run its course within the uncertainties of the mutually conditioning prin- 
ciples of common grace and common curse, prosperity and adversity being 
experienced in a manner largely unpredictable because of the inscrutable sov- 
ereignty of the divine will that dispenses them in mysterious ways." Kline, op. 
cit., p. 184. Dr. Kline has obviously never considered just why it is that life in- 
surance premiums and health insurance premiums are cheaper in Christian- 
influenced societies than in pagan societies. Apparently, the blessings of long 
life that are promised in the Bible are sufficiently non-random and "scrutable" 
that statisticians who advise insurance companies can detect statistically rele- 
vant differences between societies. 

17. "What these studies present is a position in Christian (normative) ethics. 
They do not logically commit those who agree with them to any particular 
school of eschatological interpretation." Greg L. Bahnsen, By This Standard: 
The Authority of God's Law Today (Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Eco- 
nomics, 1985), p. 8. He is correct: logically, there is no connection. Covenan- 
tally, the two doctrines are inescapable: when the law is preached, there are 
blessings; blessings lead inescapably to victory. 

653 



APPENDIX C 

both of Bahnsen's doctrines in his critique of Theonomy, 19 and Bahn- 
sen in his rebuttal essay did respond to Kline's criticisms of his post- 
millennial eschatology, but he again denies that eschatology has any- 
thing logically to do with biblical ethics. 19 But Kline was correct: there is 
unquestionably a necessary connection between a covenantal concept of 
biblical law and eschatology. Kline rejects the idea of a New Testament 
covenantal law-order, and he also rejects postmillennialism. 

Amillennial Calvinists will continue to be plagued by Dooyeweerd- 
ians, mystics, natural-law compromisers, and antinomians of all sorts 
until they finally abandon their amillennial eschatology. Furthermore, 
biblical law must be preached. It must be seen as the tool of cultural 
reconstruction. It must be seen as operating now, in New Testament 
times. It must be seen that there is a relationship between covenantal 
faithfulness and obedience to law - that without obedience there is no 
faithfulness, no matter how emotional believers may become, or how 
sweet the gospel tastes (for a while). And there are blessings that fol- 
low obedience to God's law-order. Amillennialists, by preaching es- 
chatological impotence culturally, thereby immerse themselves in 
quicksand -the quicksand of antinomianism. Some sands are quicker 
than others. Eventually, they swallow up anyone so foolish as to try to 
walk through them. Antinomianism leads into the pits of impotence 
and retreat. 

Epistemological Self -Consciousness 

What is meant by epistemological self-consciousness? It means a 
greater understanding over time of what one's presuppositions are, 
and a greater willingness to put these presuppositions into action. It 
affects both wheat and tares. 

In what ways does the wheat resemble the tares? In what ways are 
they different? The angels saw the differences immediately. God there- 
fore restrained them from ripping up the tares. He wanted to preserve 
the soil - the historical process. Therefore, the full development of 
both wheat and tares is permitted by God. 

What must be understood here is that the doctrine of special grace 
in history necessarily involves the doctrine of common grace. As the 
Christians develop to maturity, they become more powerful. This is 
not a straight-line development. There are times of locusts and blight 
and drought, both for Christians and for satanists (humanists). There 



18. Kline, op.cit. 

19. Greg L. Bahnsen, "M. G. Kline on Theonomic Politics: An Evaluation 
of His Reply," Journal of Christian Reconstruction, VI (Winter, 1979-80), No. 
2, especially p. 215. 

654 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

is ebb and flow, but always there is direction to the movement. There is 
maturity. The creeds are improved. This, in turn, gives Christians cul- 
tural power. Is it any wonder that the Westminster Confession of Faith 
was drawn up at the high point of the Puritans' control of England? 
Are improvements in the creeds useless culturally? Do improvements 
in creeds and theological understanding necessarily lead to impotence 
culturally? Nonsense! It was the Reformation that made possible 
modern science and technology. 

On the other side of the field - indeed, right next to the wheat - 
self-awareness by unbelievers also increases. But they do not always 
become more convinced of their roots in chaos. The Renaissance was 
successful in swallowing up the fruits of the Reformation only to the 
extent that it was a pale reflection of the Reformation. The Renais- 
sance leaders rapidly abandoned the magic-charged, demonically in- 
spired magicians like Giordano Bruno. 20 They may have kept the hu- 
manism of a Bruno, but after 1600, the open commitment to the 
demonic receded. In its place came rationalism, Deism, and the logic 
of an orderly world. They used stolen premises and gained power. So 
compelling was this vision of mathematically autonomous reality that 
Christians like Cotton Mather hailed the new science of Newtonian 
mechanics as essentially Christian. It was so close to Christian views 
of God's orderly being and the creation's reflection of His orderliness, 
that the Christians unhesitatingly embraced the new science. 

What we see, then, is that the Christians were not fully self- 
conscious epistemologically, and neither were the pagans. In the time 
of the apostles, there was greater epistemological awareness among 
the leaders of both sides. The church was persecuted, and it won. 
Then there was a lapse into muddled thinking on both sides. The at- 
tempt, for example, of Julian the Apostate to revive paganism late in 
the fourth century was ludicrous - it was half-hearted paganism, at 
best. Two centuries earlier, Marcus Aurelius, a true philosopher-king 
in the tradition of Plato, had been a major persecutor of Christians; 
Justin Martyr died under his years as emperor. But his debauched son, 
Commodus, was too busy with his 300 female concubines and 300 
males 21 to bother about systematic persecutions. Who was more self- 
conscious, epistemologically speaking? Aurelius still had the light of 
reason before him; his son was immersed in the religion of revolution 
— culturally impotent. He was more willing than his philosopher- 
persecutor father to follow the logic of his satanic faith. He preferred 



20. On the magic of the early Renaissance, see Frances Yates, Giordano 
Brunoand the Hermetic Tradition (New York: Vintage, [1964] 1969). 

21, Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Em- 
pire, Milman edition, 5 Vols. (Philadelphia: Porter& Coates, [1776]), I, p. 144. 

655 



APPENDIX C 

debauchery to power. Commodus was assassinated 13 years after he 
became Emperor. The Senate resolved that his name be execrated. 22 
If a modern investigator would like to see as fully consistent a 
pagan culture as one might imagine, he could visit the African tribe, 
the Ik, Colin Turnbull did, and his book, The Mountain People 
(1973), is a classic. He found almost total rebellion against law- fam- 
ily law, civic law, all law. Yet he also found a totally impotent, beaten 
people who were rapidly becoming extinct. They were harmless to the 
West because they were more self-consistent than the West's satanists. 

The Marxist Challenge 

Marxists, on the other hand, are a threat. They believe in linear 
history (officially, anyway - their system is at bottom cyclical, how- 
ever). 23 They believe in law. They believe in destiny. They believe in 
historical meaning. They believe in historical stages, though not ethic- 
ally determined stages such as we find in Deuteronomy. They believe in 
science. They believe in literature, propaganda, and the power of the 
written word. They believe in higher education. In short, they have a 
philosophy which is a kind of perverse mirror image of Christian or- 
thodoxy. They are dangerous, not because they are acting consistently 
with their ultimate philosophy of chaos, but because they limit the 
function of chaos to one area alone: the revolutionary transformation 
of bourgeois culture. (I am speaking here primarily of Soviet Marx- 
ists.) And where are they winning converts? In the increasingly impo- 
tent, increasingly existentialist, increasingly antinomian West. Until 
the West abandoned its remnant of Christian culture, Marxism could 
flourish only in the underdeveloped, basically pagan areas of the 
world. An essentially Western philosophy of optimism found converts 
among the intellectuals of the Far East, Africa, and Latin America, 
who saw the fruitlessness of Confucian stagnation and relativism, the 
impotence of demonic ritual, or the dead-end nature of demon wor- 
ship. Marxism is powerful only to the extent that it has the trappings 
of Augustinianism, coupled with subsidies, especially technological 
subsidies and long-term credit, from Western industry. 

There is irony here. Marx believed that "scientific socialism" would 
triumph only in those nations that had experienced the full develop- 
ment of capitalism. He believed that in most cases (possibly excepting 
Russia), rural areas had to abandon feudalism and develop a fully 



22. Ethelbert StauSer, Christ and the Caesars (Philadelphia: Westminster 
Press, 1955), p. 223. 

23. Gary North, Marx's Religion of Revolution: The Doctrine of Creative 
Destruction (Nutley, New Jersey: Craig Press, 1968), pp. 100-1. 

656 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

capitalist culture before the socialist revolution would be successful. 
Yet it was primarily in the rural regions of the world that Marxist ideas 
and groups were first successful. The industrialized West was still too 
Christian or too pragmatic (recognizing that "honesty is the best pol- 
icy") to capitulate to the Marxists, except immediately following a lost 
war. 

Marxists have long dominated the faculties of Latin American uni- 
versities, but not U.S. universities. In 1964, for example, there were 
not half a dozen outspoken Marxist economists teaching in American 
universities (and possibly as few as one, Stanford's Paul Baran). Since 
1965, however, New Left scholars of a Marxist persuasion have be- 
come a force to be reckoned with in all the social sciences, including 
economics .24 The skepticism, pessimism, relativism, and irrelevance 
of modern "neutral" education have left faculties without an adequate 
defense against confident, shrill, vociferous Marxists, primarily young 
Marxists, who began to appear on the campuses after 1964. Epistemo- 
logical rot has left the establishment campus liberals with little more 
than tenure to protect them. 25 

Since 1965, however, Marxism has made more inroads among the 
young intellectuals of the industrialized West than at any time since 
the 1930s - an earlier era of pessimism and skepticism about established 
values and traditions. Marxists are successful among savages, whether 
in Africa or at Harvard — epistemological savages. Marxism offers an 
alternative to despair. It has the trappings of optimism. It has the trap- 
pings of Christianity. It is still a nineteenth-century system, drawing 
on the intellectual capital of a more Christian intellectual universe. 
These trappings of Christian order are the source of Marxism's 
influence in an increasingly relativistic world. 

Satan 's Final Rebellion 

In the last days of this final era in human history, the satanists will 
still have the trappings of Christian order about them. Satan has to sit 
on God's lap, so to speak, in order to slap His face - or try to. Satan 
cannot be consistent to his own philosophy of autonomous order and 
still be a threat to God. An autonomous order leads to chaos and im- 
potence. He knows that there is no neutral ground in philosophy. He 
knew Adam and Eve would die spiritually on the day that they ate the 
fruit. He is a good enough theologian to know that there is one God, 



24. Martin Bronfenbrenner, "Radical Economics in America: A 1970 Sur- 
vey, " Journal of Economic Literature, VIII (Sept. 1970). 

25. Gary North, "The Epistemological Crisis of American Universities," in 
Gary North (cd.), Foundations of Christian Scholarship: Essays in the Van Til 
Perspective (Vallecito, California: Ross House Books, 1976). 

657 



APPENDIX C 

and he and his host tremble at the thought (James 2:19). When 
demonic men take seriously his lies about the nature of reality, they 
become impotent, sliding off (or nearly off) God's lap. It is when 
satanists realize that Satan's official philosophy of chaos and antinom- 
ian lawlessness is a lie that they become dangerous. (Marxists, once 
again, are more dangerous to America than are the Ik.) They learn 
more of the truth, but they pervert it and try to use it against God's 
people. 

Thus, the biblical meaning of epistemological self-consciousness is 
not that the satanist becomes consistent with Satan's official philoso- 
phy (chaos), but rather that Satan's host becomes consistent with what 
Satan really believes: that order, law, power are the product of God's 
hated order. They learn to use law and order to build an army of con- 
quest. In short, they use common grace - knowledge of the truth - to 
pervert the truth and to attack God's people. 'They turn from a false 
knowledge offered to them by Satan, and they adopt a perverted form 
of truth to use in their rebellious plans. They mature, in other words. 
Or, as C. S. Lewis has put into the mouth of his fictitious character, 
the senior devil Screwtape, when materialists finally believe in Satan 
but not in God, then the war is over. 26 Not quite; when they believe in 
God, know He is going to win, and nevertheless strike out in fury - 
not blind fury, but fully self-conscious fury — at the works of God, 
then the war is over. 

Cooperation 

How, then, can we cooperate with such men? Simply on the basis 
of common grace. Common grace has not yet fully developed. But 
this cooperation must be in the interests of God's kingdom. Whether 
or not a particular ad hoc association is beneficial must be made in 
terms of standards set forth in biblical law. Common grace is not com- 
mon ground; there is no common ground uniting men except for the 
image of God in every man. 

Because external conformity to the terms of biblical law does pro- 
duce visibly good results - contrary to Prof. Kline's theory of God's 
mysterious will in history - unbelievers for a time are willing to adopt 
these principles, since they seek the fruits of Christian culture. In 
short, some ethical satanists respond to the knowledge of God's law 
written in their hearts. They have a large degree of knowledge about 
God's creation, but they are not yet willing to attack that world. They 
have knowledge through common grace, but they do not yet see what 



26. C. S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters (New York: Macmillan, 1969), Let- 
ter 7. 

658 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

this means for their own actions. (To some extent, the Communists 
see, but they have not yet followed through; they have not launched a 
final assault against the West.) 

The essence of Adam's rebellion was not intellectual; it was ethical. 
No one has argued this more forcefully than Van Til. The mere addi- 
tion of knowledge to or by the unregenerate man does not alter the 
essence of his status before God. He is still a rebel, but he may possess 
knowledge. Knowledge can be applied to God's creation and produce 
beneficial results. Knowledge can also produce a holocaust. The issue 
is ethics, not knowledge. Thus, men can cooperate in terms of mutually 
shared knowledge; ultimately, they cannot cooperate in terms of a 
mutually shared ethics. 

What of the special curse? What is the ethical rebel's ethical rela- 
tion to God? Common grace increases the unregenerate man's special 
curse. When common grace increases to its maximum, the special 
curse of God is revealed: total rebellion of man against the truth of 
God and in terms of the common grace - knowledge, power, wealth, 
prestige, etc. - of God, leading to final judgment. God does remove 
part of His restraint at the very end: the restraint on suicidal destruc- 
tion. He allows them to achieve that death which they love (Prov. 
8 :36b). But they still have power and wealth, as in the Babylonian Em- 
pire the night it fell. 

Pagans can teach us about physics, mathematics, chemistry, and 
many other topics. How is this possible? Because common grace has 
increased. They had several centuries of leadership from Christians, as 
well as Enlightenment figures who adopted a philosophy of coherence 
that at least resembled the Christian doctrine of providence. They can- 
not hold the culture together in terms of their philosophy of chaos — 
Satan's official viewpoint - but they still can make important discov- 
eries. They use stolen capital, in every sense. 

Christians Must Lead 

When there is Christian revival and the preaching and application 
of the whole counsel of God, then Christians can once again take the 
position of real leadership. The unbelievers also can make contribu- 
tions to the subduing of the earth because they will be called back to 
the work of the law written in their hearts. Common grace will in- 
crease throughout the world. But Christians must be extremely careful 
to watch for signs of ethical deviation from those who seemingly are 
useful co-workers in the kingdom. There can be cooperation for exter- 
nal goals — the fulfilling of the dominion covenant which was given to 
all men — but not in the realm of ethics. We must watch the Soviets to 
see how not to build a society. We must construct countermeasures to 

659 



APPENDIX C 

their military offenses. We must not adopt their view of proletarian 
ethics, even though their chess players or mathematicians may show us 
a great deal. The law of God as revealed in the Bible must be domi- 
nant, not the work of the law written in the hearts of the unrighteous. 
The way to cooperate is on the basis of biblical law. The law tells us of 
the limitations on man. It keeps us humble before God and dominant 
over nature. We shall determine the accuracy and usefulness of the 
works of unregenerate men who are exercising their God-given talents, 
working out their damnation with fear and trembling. 

Strangers within the gates were given many of the benefits of com- 
mon grace — God's response to the conversion of the Hebrews. They 
received full legal protection in Hebrew courts (Ex. 22:21; 23:9; Deut. 
24:17). They were not permitted to eat special holy foods (Ex. 29:33; 
Lev. 22:10), thereby sealing them off from the religious celebrations of 
the temple. But they were part of the feast of the tithe, a celebration 
before the Lord (Deut. 14:22-29). Thus, they were beneficiaries of the 
civil order that God established for His people. They also could pro- 
duce goods and services in confidence that the fruits of their labor 
would not be confiscated from them by a lawless civil government. 
This made everyone richer, for all men in the community could work 
out the terms of the dominion covenant. 

We are told that the natural man does not receive the things of the 
Spirit (I Cor. 2:14-16). We are told that God's wisdom is seen as foolish- 
ness by the unregenerate (I Cor. 1:18-21). We are told to beware, "lest 
any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradi- 
tion of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ" 
(Col. 2:8). There is an unbridgeable separation philosophically b e - 
tween unbelievers and believers. They begin with different starting 
points: chaos vs. creation, God vs. man. Only common grace can re- 
duce the conflict in application between pagan and Christian philoso- 
phy. The ethical rebellion of the unregenerate lies beneath the surface, 
smoldering, ready to flare up in wrath, but he is restrained by God and 
God's law. He needs the power that law provides. Therefore, he as- 
sents to some of the principles of applied bib lical law and conforms 
himself to part of the work of the law that is written on his heart. But 
on first principles, he cannot agree. And even near the end, when men 
may confess the existence of one God and tremble at the thought, they 
will not submit their egos to that God. They will fight to the death — to 
the second death - to deny the claims that the God of the Bible has 
over every part of their being. 

Thus, there can be cooperation in the subduing of the earth. But 
Christians must set forth the strategy and the tactics. The unregener- 
ate man will be like a paid consultant; he will provide his talents, but 
the Lord will build the culture. 

660 



COMMON GRACE, ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

Common Grace vs. Common Ground 

We must not argue from common grace to common ground. We 
cannot do so because with the increase of common grace we come 
closer to that final rebellion in all its satanic might. Common grace 
combines the efforts of men in the subduing of the earth, but Chris- 
tians work for the glory of God openly, while the unregenerate work 
(officially) for the glory of manor the glory of Satan. They do, in fact, 
work to the glory of God, for on that last day every knee shall bow to 
Him (Phil. 2:10). The wealth of the wicked is laid up for the just (Prov. 
13:22). So there are no common facts, ethically speaking. 

At that final day, when their rebellion begins, all of Satan's host 
will know about the facts of God' s world, for common grace will be at 
its peak. Nevertheless, they turn their backs on God and rebel. All 
facts are interpreted facts, and the interpretation, not the facts as 
such — there are no "facts as such" — is what separates the lost from the 
elect. Inevitably, the natural man holds back (actively suppresses) the 
truth in unrighteousness (Rem. 1:18).27 No philosophical "proofs" of 
God (other than a proof which begins by assuming the existence of the 
God revealed in the Bible) are valid, and even the assumption of the 
existence of the God of the Bible is not sufficient to save a man's 
soul. 28 Only God can do that (John 6:44). There is no common ground 
philosophically, only metaphysically. We are made in God's image by a 
common Creator (Acts 17:24-31). Every man knows this. We can, as 
men, only remind all men of what they know. God uses that knowl- 
edge to redeem men. 

The unbeliever uses stolen intellectual capital to reason cor- 
rectly — correctly in the sense of being able to use that knowledge as a 
tool to subdue the earth, not in the sense of knowing God as an 
adopted son knows Him. His conclusions can correspond to external 
reality sufficiently to allow him to work out his rebellious faith to even 
greater destruction than if he had not had accurate knowledge (Luke 
12:47-48). He "knows" somehow that"2 plus 2 equals 4," and also that 
this fact of mental symmetry can be used to cause desired effects in the 
external realm of nature. Why this mental symmetry should exist, and 
why it should bear any relation to the external realm of nature, is un- 
explainable by the knowledge of natural man, a fact admitted by 



27. Murray, Romans, commenting on Remans 1:18. 

28. Van Til, The Defense of the Faith (Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Re- 
formed, 1963), attacks the traditional Roman Catholic and Arminian proofs 
of God. They do not prove the God of the Bible, he argues, only a finite god 
of the human mind. 

661 



APPENDIX C 

Nobel prize-winning physicist, Eugene Wigner. 29 

Christians, because they have a proper doctrine of creation, can 
explain both. So the unbeliever uses borrowed intellectual capital at 
every step. Christians can use some of his work (by checking his find- 
ings against the revelation in the Bible), and the unbeliever can use the 
work of Christians. The earth will be subdued. The closer the unbe- 
liever' s presuppositions are to those revealed in the Bible (such as the 
conservative economist's assumption of the fact of economic scarcity, 
corresponding to Gen. 3:17-19), the more likely that the discoveries 
made in terms of that assumption will be useful. By useful, I mean 
useful in the common task of all men, subduing the earth. Thus, there 
can be cooperation between Christians and non-Christians. 

Conclusion 

Unbelievers appear to be culturally dominant today. Believers have 
retreated into antinomian pietism and pessimism, for they have aban- 
doned faith in the two features of Christian social philosophy that 
make progress possible: 1) the dynamic of eschatological optimism, 
and 2) the tool of the dominion covenant, biblical law. We should con- 
clude, then, that either the dissolution of culture is at hand (for the 
common grace of the unregenerate cannot long be sustained without 
leadership in the realm of culture from the regenerate), or else the re- 
generate must regain sight of their lost truths: postmillennialism and 
biblical law. For common grace to continue, and for external coopera- 
tion between believers and unbelievers to be fruitful or even possible, 
Christians must call the external culture's guidelines back to God's 
law. They must regain the leadership they forfeited to the speculations 
of self-proclaimed "reasonable" apostates. If this is not done, then we 
will slide back once more, until the unbelievers resemble the Ik and the 
Christians can begin the process of cultural domination once more. 
For common grace to continue to increase, it must be sustained by 
special grace. Either unbelievers will be converted, or leadership will 
flow back toward the Christians. If neither happens, we will return 
eventually to barbarism. 

Understandably, I pray for the regeneration of the ungodly and the 
rediscovery of biblical law-and accurate biblical eschatology on the 
part of present Christians and future converts. Whether we will see 
such a revival in our day is unknown to me. There are reasons to be- 



29. Eugene Wigner, "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the 
Natural Sciences," Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics XI 1 1 
(1960), pp. 1-14. See also Vern Poythress, "A Biblical View of Mathematics," in 
Gary North (cd.), Foundations of Christian Scholarship, op. cit., ch. 9. See 
also his essay in The Journal of Christian Reconstruction, I (Summer 1974). 

662 



COMMON GRACE , ESCHATOLOGY, AND BIBLICAL LAW 

lieve that it can and will happen. There are also reasons to doubt such 
optimism. The Lord knows. 

We must abandon antinomianism and eschatologies that are inher- 
ently antinomian. We must call men back to faith in the God of the 
whole Bible. We must affirm that in the plan of God there will come a 
day of increased self-awareness, when men will call churls churlish 
and liberal men gracious (Isa. 32). This will be a day of great external 
blessings - the greatest in history. Long ages of such self-awareness 
unfold before us. And at the end of time comes a generation of rebels 
who know churls from liberals and strike out against the godly. They 
will lose the war. 

Therefore, common grace is essentially future grace. There is an 
ebb and flow throughout history, but essentially it is future grace. It 
must not be seen as essentially prior or earlier grace. Only amillennial- 
ists can hold to such a position - antinomian amillennialists at that. 
The final judgment appears at the end of time against the backdrop of 
common grace. The common curse will be at its 10 west point, the 
prelude to special cursing of eternal duration. The final judgment 
comes, just as the great flood came, against a background of God's ex- 
ternal benefits to mankind in general. The iniquity of the Amorites 
will at last be full. 

Does the postmillennialist believe that there will be faith in general 
on the earth when Christ appears? Not if he understands the implica- 
tions of the doctrine of common grace. Does he expect the whole earth 
to be destroyed by the unbelieving rebels before Christ strikes them 
dead - doubly dead? No. The judgment comes before they can do 
their work. Common grace is extended to allow unbelievers to fill up 
their cup of wrath. They are vessels of wrath. Therefore, the fulfilling 
of the terms of the dominion covenant through common grace is the 
final step in the process of filling up these vessels of wrath. The vessels 
of grace, believers, will also be filled. Everything is full. Will God 
destroy His preliminary down payment on the New Heavens and the 
New Earth? Will God erase the sign that His word has been obeyed, 
that the dominion covenant has been fulfilled? Will Satan, that great 
destroyer, have the joy of seeing God' s word thwarted, his handiwork 
torn down by Satan's very hordes? The amillennialist answers yes. The 
postmillennialist must deny it with all his strength. 

There is continuity in life, despite discontinuities. The wealth of 
the sinner is laid up for the just. Satan would like to burn up God's 
field, but he cannot. The tares and wheat grow to maturity, and then 
the reapers go out to harvest the wheat, cutting away the chaff and 
tossing chaff into the fire. Satan would like to turn back the crack of 
doom, return to ground zero, return to the garden of Eden, when the 

663 



APPENDIX C 

dominion covenant was first given. The fulfillment of the dominion 
covenant is the final act of Satan that is positive — an extension of 
common grace. After that, common grace becomes malevolent — 
absolutely malevolent - as Satan uses the law of his time and the last 
of his power to strike out against God's people. When he uses his gifts 
to become finally, totally destructive, he is cut down from above. This 
final culmination of common grace is Satan's crack of doom. 

And the meek - meek before God, active toward His creation - 
shall at last inherit the earth. A renewed earth and renewed heaven is 
the final payment by God the Father to His Son and to those He has 
given to His Son. This is the postmillennial hope. 

Postscript 

By now, I have alienated every known Christian group. I have 
alienated the remaining Christian Reformed Church members who are 
orthodox by siding with the Protestant Reformed Church against 
Point 1 of the 1924 Synod. There is no favor in God's common grace. I 
have alienated the Protestant Reformed Church by arguing for post- 
millennialism. I have alienated the premillenniahsts by arguing that 
the separation between wheat and tares must come at the end of his- 
tory, not a thousand years before the end (or, in the dispensational, 
pretribulational premillennial framework, 10IO7 years before). I have 
alienated postmillennial pietists who read and delight in the works of 
Jonathan Edwards by arguing that Edwards' tradition was destructive 
to biblical law in 1740 and still is. It leads nowhere unless it matures 
and adopts the concept of biblical law as a toed of victory. I have alien- 
ated the Bible Presbyterian Church, since its leaders deny the domin- 
ion covenant. Have I missed anyone? Oh, yes, I have alienated post- 
millennial Arminians ("positive confession" charismatics) by arguing 
that the rebels in the last day are not backslidden Christians. 

Having accomplished this, I hope that others will follow through 
on the outline I have sketched relating common grace, eschatology, 
and biblical law. Let those few who take this essay seriously avoid the 
theological land mines that still clutter up the landscape. There are re- 
finements that must be made, implications that must be discovered 
and then worked out. I hope that my contribution will make other 
men's tasks that much easier. 



664 



SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 



SELECT 
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667 



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669 



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Related Studies 

Adams, Jay. The Time Is at Hand. Nutley, NJ: The Presbyterian and 

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The Later Christian Fathers: A Selection from the Writ- 



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Paquier, Richard. Dynamics of Worship: Foundations and Uses of 
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Schmemann, Alexander. Church, World, Mission: Reflections on 

Orthodoxy in the West. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary 

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. For the Life of the World: Sacraments and Orthodoxy. 

Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, revised cd., 1979. 
. Introduction to Liturgical Theology. Crestwood, NY: 



St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1966. 

Seiss, Joseph A. The Gospel in the Stars. Grand Rapids: Kregel Pub- 
lications, [1882] 1972. 

S events, Sulpitius. Sacred History. 

Stauffer, Ethelbert. Christ and the Caesars. Philadelphia: The West- 
minster Press, 1955. 

Suetonius. The Twelve Caesars. 

Sutton, Ray R. That You May Prosper: Dominion By Covenant. Tyler, 
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Symington, William. Messiah the Prince: or, The Mediatorial Domin- 
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Tacitus, Cornelius. The Annals of Imperial Rome. 

The Histories. 

Tel ford, William. The Barren Temple and the Withered Tree. 
Sheffield: Department of Biblical Studies, University of Sheffield, 
1980. 

Terry, Milton S. Biblical Hermeneutics; A Treatise on the Interpreta- 
tion of the Old and New Testaments. Grand Rapids: Zondervan 
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676 



SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 

TertaWian.Against Marcion. 

The Apology. 

Thurian, Max. The Mystery of the Eucharist: An Ecumenical Ap- 
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Heaven and Hell: A Biblical and Theological Overview. 

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Torrance, T. F. Royal Priesthood. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd Ltd., 
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Vandervelde, George, "The Gift of Prophecy and the Prophetic 
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Vanderwaal, Cornells. Hal Lindsey and Bible Prophecy. St. Cather- 
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Van Til, Cornelius. Apologetics. Philadelphia: Westminster Theolog- 
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Common Grace and the Gospel. Nutley, NJ: The Pres- 
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The Defense of the Faith. Philadelphia: The Presbyter- 



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.. Redemptive History and Biblical Interpretation: The 



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Wallace, Ronald S. Calvin's Doctrine of the Christian Life. Tyler, TX: 
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677 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 

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Webber, Robert E. Worship: Old and New. Grand Rapids: Zondervan 

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Weeks, Noel. "Admonition and Error in Hebrews." The Westminster 

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Evangelistic Association, 1977. 



678 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 

OLD TESTAMENT 

(Boldface entries indicate that a passage has been quoted or discussed at length) 



jenesis 






Genesis 




Genesis 




1 


16, 173, 273, 


3:5 


451 


15:16 


195,631 




305,361,478 


3:6 


432 


15:17 


64 


1:1 


306n 




3:7 


136 


15:18 


250 


1:1-5 


288, 289 




3:8 


71, 86, 198 


17:7-8 


549 


1:2 


222, 244, 


320, 


3:13 


337 


17:10-14 


613 




327 




3:13-15 


304 


18 


645 


1:4 


173 




3:14 


307 


18:2 


479 


1:5 


573 




3:15 


29, 38, 298, 307, 


19 


645 


1:7 


197n 






330 


19:1 


479 


1:8 


573 




3:17-18 


446 


1913 


449 


1:10 


173 




3:17-19 


633, 662 


19:21-22 


646 


1:12 


173 




3:19 


31, 131, 279 


19:24-25 


365, 525, 529 


1:13 


573 




3:21 


136, 279 


19:24-28 


395 


1:14 


197,553 




3:22-24 


126 


19:26 


645 


1:16 


197,489, 


553 


3:24 


86, 555, 576 


19:28 


232, 365, 453 


1:18 


173 




41 


483 




472, 529 


1:19 


573 




4:3-8 


282 


19:30-38 


198, 645 


1:20-25 


306 




4:10 


194 


201-18 


307 


1:21 


173, 304 




4:15 


632 


21 


373 


1:23 


573 




4:25 


307 


21:8-14 


131 


1:24-31 


345 




5:5 


514 


21:9 


87 


1:25 


173 




5:25 


514n, 644n 


22:1-14 


87 


1:26 


327 




5:27 


644n 


22:2 


354 


1:26-28 


306, 510 




5:28 


514n 


22:6 


232 


1:27 


306n 




5:28-29 


644n 


22:16 


264 


1:27-28 


543 




6:1-8 


514n 


22:17 


525 


1:28 


370, 625, 


635, 


6:1-10 


307 


22:17-18 


215 




647 




7:1 


514n 


23 


282 


1:29 


288 




7:6 


514n, 644n 


23:7 


479 


1:31 


173, 304 


347n, 


7:11 


244 


23:12 


479 




573 




7:22 


157 


25:22-23 


307 


2 


361 




8:1 


203 


26:1-11 


307 


2:2-3 


70 




8:2 


244 


26:5 


489n 


2:6 


566 




8:13 


288 


27 


307 


2:7 


283, 344 




8:20-21 


186 


27:29 


479 


2:7-8 


341 




8:22 


157 


27:37 


614 


2:9 


288 




91-7 


635, 647 


28:10-12 


422 


2:10 


16 




9:13-16 


167 


28:12 


260 


2:10-12 


557 




9:13-17 


186 


29:31-30:24 


211 


2:10-14 


566 




927 


514 


31:45 


264 


2:11-12 


429 




11:1-9 


431 


31:52 


264 


2:12 


110, 556 




11:9 


422 


32:12 


525 


2:15 


78n, 86, 


576 


12:10-20 


307 


33:3 


479 


2:16-17 


288 




14:14 


613 


33:6-7 


479 


2:17 


115 




14:22 


264 


35:16-18 


211 


2:19-20 


341 




15 


489n 


37:5-11 


296 


3:1-5 


69n, 304 




15:5 


214, 215 


37:7 


479 


3:1-6 


337 




15:9-12 


241 


37:9 


81, 159, 301 


3:1-15 


314 




15:11 


489 


37:9-10 


479 



679 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Genesis 




hxodus 




Exodus 




37:20-41:45 


87 


1027 


404 


23:23 


261 


38:8-10 


427n 


11:1-2 


535 


2324-26 


642 


39:13-20 


87 


12:21 


151 


2326 


646 


41:18-25 


2% 


1235-36 


535 


23:32-33 


631 


41:27 


203 


1240 


275 


24:9-11 


151, 332 


41:32 


2% 


13:2 


279n 


2410 


155n, 384 


41:40-44 


87 


13:13 


279n 


25:1-2 


389 


426 


479 


13:18 


245 


25:8f 


272 


43:16 


18 


13:19 


282 


25:9 


141, 159,388 


43:26 


479 


13:21-22 


64,261,402 


25:16 


167, 264, 389 


43:28 


479 


13:27-30 


631 


25:20 


222 


45:4-8 


87 


148 


404 


25:21 


167 


47:29-31 


282 


1413-14 


535 


25:21-22 


264 


49:8 


479 


14:19 


261 


25:31-40 


464 


49:9-10 


170 


14:19-20 


64 


25:40 


141, 150, 159 


49:17 


212 


1421 


203 




388 


49:25 


244 


14:21-22 


407 


26:30 


141, 388 


4928-33 


282 


14:23 


376 


27:1-2 


16 


50:1-14 


282 


14:24 


64, 261 


27:14-15 


130n 


50:20 


87 


1428 


376 


28:4 


73 


5024-26 


282 


14:30-31 


384 


28:9-12 


87, 110, 130 






15 


177n, 386, 387 


28:15-21 


557 


Exodus 




15:1-21 


384 


28:17-19 


150 


l 


307 


15:3 


535 


28:17-21 


301n 


1:8 


483 


15:3-5 


460 


28:26-29 


389 


1:16 


217 


15:10 


203, 460 


28:36 


31, 205, 342 


2:15 


217 


15:11 


388 


28:36-38 


87, 131, 327 


3:2ff 


270 


15:14-16 


387 


28:36-41 


509 


3:14 


59n 


15:17 


203, 238, 447 


28:39-43 


389 


3:21-22 


535 


15:19 


376 


28:43 


272 


3:22 


429 


16:31 


110 


29:5 


74 


4:1-4 


304 


16:33-34 


109 


29:33 


660 


4:19 


217 


1634 


389 


2944 


272 


4:22 


217 


17:5-6 


151 


30:17-21 


155 


6:8 


264 


18 


82n 


3018 


385n 


7-13 


277 


18:12 


151 


30:28 


385n 


7:8-12 


304 


19:4 


226, 241 


31:1-11 


464 


7:13 


404 


19:4-6 


320 


31:18 


389 


7:15-25 


276 


19:6 


277, 435, 442 


32:11-14 


335 


7:17-21 


238, 396, 398 


19:9 


64 


32:15 


167, 264, 389 


7:21 


239 


19:15 


356 


32:34 


261 


7:23 


404 


1916 


232, 473 


33:2 


261 


8-11 


276 


19:16-18 


371 


33:8-11 


338 


8:1-7 


408 


19:16-19 


64,71, 154, 354 


33:9-12 


261 


8:2-4 


3% 


1918 


196, 232 


33:14 


270 


8:15 


404 


20:4 


261 


34:1-8 


332 


8:19 


404 


20:8-11 


345 


34:5ff 


270 


8:32 


404 


20:11 


261,266 


3410 


387 


9:7 


404 


2012 


646 


34:29 


264 


9:8-11 


398 


21:2 


345 


3429-35 


270,332 


9:8-12 


3% 


21:5-6 


334 


34:33-35 


149 


9:12 


404 


21:23-25 


450 


35:21-29 


535 


918 


413 


221 


18,19 


36:3-8 


535 


9:18-26 


396, 417 


22:4 


450 


38:21 
39:27-29 


389 
74 


9:22-26 

924 


236 
413 


22:7 
22:21 


450 
660 


9:34-35 


404 


22:29 


357 


40:7 


385n 


10:4-20 


3% 


2231 


624n 


40:11 


385n 


10:12-15 


244 


23:9 


660 


40:20 


167 


1013 


203 


23:16 


357 


40:30 


385n 


1019 


203 


23:19 


357 


4034 


535 


10:20 


404 


23:20 


261 


40:34-35 


392 


1021-23 


1%, 240, 396 


23:20-23 


270,312 


4034-38 


260 



680 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Leviticus 




Leviticus 




Numbers 




1:13 


235 


26:12 


94 


32:17 


129,245 


4:7 


397 


26:14-39 


16 


33:39 


646 


4:12 


397 


26:18 


16,89 


33:52 


129 


4:13-21 


249, 391 


26:21 


16, 89, 249 


33:55 


129 


4:18 


397 


26:23 


249 


35:9-15 


345 


425 


397 


26:24 


16,89 


35:30 


276 


4:30 


397 


26:28 


16, 89, 249 






434 


397 






Deuteronomy 


6:13 


608 


Numbers 




I 


82n 


7:26-27 


399 


1 


159 


1:1-5 


15, 49 


8:15 


397 


1:50 


265, 389 


1:6-4:49 


15, 85 


9:9 


397 


1:53 


265,389 


1:11 


206, 507 


9:23-24 


392 


2 


16,159,301 


224-25 


85 


9:24 


232 


3:36-37 


261n 


2:31 


85 


10:1-2 


339 


4:5 


265 


3:18-22 


85 


10:1-3 


392 


4:31-32 


261n 


41 


85 


1014 


23 2n 


5;2 


399 


4:2 


580 


11 


430 


5:21-22 


133 


4:14 


85 


11:9-12 


408 


6:24-26 


337 


4:19 


159 


11:41-47 


408 


6:25 


131 


4:37-40 


85 


12 


18 


7:1 


272 


5 


141 


15:16 


356 


8:4 


141, 388 


5:1-26:19 


15, 141 


15:19-33 


399 


9:9-13 


254 


5:26 


77 


16:2 


260 


9:15 


265, 389 


6 


416 


16:4 


74, 389 


10:1-9 


234 


6:4-9 


131 


16:8 


446 


10:2-4 


206 


6:5-6 


162n 


16:10 


87, 446 


10:10 


235, 289 


6:6-8 


31, 205, 342 


16:12-13 


232 


10:11 


265, 389 


7 


141 


16:13 


264 


1035-36 


206 


7:9 


206, 507 


16:13-14 


230 


11:1-3 


392 


8 


625, 641, 642 


16:26 


446 


11:7 


110 


8:1-20 


498n 


17:7 


87, 246, 447n 


ll:16ff 


217 


8:6-20 


622 


17:10-14 


431 


11:16-17 


151 


8:7 


244 


17:10-16 


399 


11:25 


70 


8:15 


87, 306n 


17:11 


194 


11:29 


140, 149, 382, 


8:18 


136, 560, 642, 


18:21 


308 




479, 569 




645, 650 


18:24-28 


89, 135, 190 


11:31 


203 


8:19-20 


650 


18:24-30 


249, 291 


12:5 


261 


9-10 


141 


18:28 


322n 


12:6-8 


131, 149 


9:lff 


217 


19:13 


516 


12:8 


570 


10:2 


167 


20 


430 


13-14 


428 


11:24 


250 


20:7-8 


47s 


1411-19 


399 


11:29 


140 


20:22-26 


279,430 


14:13-24 


335 


12 


141 


21:1 


399 


16:28-33 


322 


12:5 


141 


21:9 


439, 451 


16:28-35 


339 


12:32 


580 


21:18 


136 


1631-33 


491,529 


13:1-5 


336 


22:10 


660 


16:35 


277, 392 


13:1-18 


141 


22:27 


18 


16:46-50 


232 


13:10 


38 


23:9-21 


357 


19:11-12 


516 


13:12-18 


232, 395 


2324 


289 


2016 


261 


13:16 


232 


23:24-25 


235 


22-24 


107 


14:22-29 


660 


23:33-43 


222 


2231 


87, 109 


15:16-17 


334 


23:39-43 


144 


24:7-8 


87 


16:1-8 


143 


24:3 


265 


24:17 


160 


16:9 


373 


24:10-11 


212 


25 


107 


16:9-12 


143 


2417 


579 


25:1-3 


2C6 


16:13-15 


143 


26 


16, 17, 121, 191, 


28:9-10 


386 


17:1-13 


141 




249, 454, 456, 


29:1 


289 


17:6 
17:16-17 


265n, 276 

350 


26:1-13 


617 
16 


29:1-6 
31:1-5 


235 
206 


18:4-5 
18:9-13 


356 
159 


26:3-13 


511 


31:8 


109 


18:15-19 


270, 283 


26:11 


94 


31:16 


87, 107 


18:21-22 


42 


26:11-12 


546,610 


31:48-52 


206 


19:15 


265n, 276 



681 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Deuteronomy 


Deuteronomy 


Judges 




20 


142-43 


321-4 


38(i 


49 


298 


20:1-4 


143 


3234 


387 


417-22 


298 


20:7 


356 


324 


387 


421 


305 


20:10 


143 


32:5 


381 


5:19 


411 


20:11 


143 


325-14 


380 


5:20 


81,417 


20:13 
21:17 


143 
278, 306 


329-11 

32:10-11 

32:11 


241 

222, 320 
226 


5:24-27 

5% -27 


38, 298 

305 


21:22f 


490 


32:15-18 


380 


7:11 


245 


21:23 


568 


3215-22 


471 


7:12 


524 


23:10-11 


356 


32:16 


381 


7:15-22 


235 


23:18 


578 


32:19-25 


380 


7:25 


198 


24:17 


660 


32:20-21 


381 


8:26 

9:5 

9:8-15 

950-57 


429 


261-19 
27:1-8 

27:1-26 


144 
264 
225 


32:21-25 

3223-43 
32:26-43 


381 
472 
380, 381n 


38 

203 

305 


27:1-30:20 


15, 225 


32:32 


281 


9:53 


37, 298 


27:15-26 


133 


32:35 


472 


16:21 


464n 


28 


16, 121, 191, 


32:40 


264 


20:40 


232 




225-26, 252, 


32:40-43 


392 


Ruth 

i 






442, 454, 456, 


3241 


472 






498n, 539, 617 


32:43 


472 


426 


28:1-14 


16,225, 511, 


3244 


380 


1 Samuel 






640 


32:44-34:12 


. 380 




28:12 


458 


33 


382 


1:22 


337 


28:15-19 


226 


33:1 


380 


2:2 


388 


28:15-68 


16, 225,640 


33:2 


260,382 


2:8 


261n 


28:20-26 


226 


33:13 


244 


2:18 


337 


28:26 


241,489 


33:26-29 


382 


5:1-5 


305 


28:27 
28:27-37 


398 

226 


341-9 
34:10 


382 
382 


7:5-9 
8:7-8 


335 
42a 


28:34 


252 






12:5 


265 


28:35 


398 


Joshua 




12:9-15 


335 


28:38-48 


226 


1:4 


250 


13:13-14 


126 


28:49 


226, 241, 320, 


1:14 


245 


15:23 


340 




489 


2 


304n 


17:4 


346 


28:49-57 


226, 381 


3:9-17 


407 


17:5 


346 


28:49-68 


288 


3:10 


77 


17:49 


38 


28:53-57 


402 


4:12 


245 


17:49-51 


305, 346 


28:58-68 


226 


4:16 


265 


18-27 


308 


28x54 


227 


4:22-24 


407 


18:10-11 


308 


29:4 


136 


5:13-15 


312 


194-6 


159 


29:10-15 


225 


5:14 


159 


21:4-5 


356 


29:12 


266n 


6 


234 


24:16 


291n 


29:17 


430 


62-5 


173 


25:11 


18 


29:18 


240 


6:4-5 


229 


31:7-13 


282 


29:20 


580 


7:9 


129 






29:22-28 


226, 281 


7:19 


285 


2 Samuel 




2929 


263 


8:30-35 


264 


1:24 


429 


30:1-10 


227 


9 


632 


5:6 


129 


30:3 


227 


9:24 


129 


7:8-29 


514 


30:4 


227 


10:11 


417 


7:10 


310 


31-34 


15, 379 


10:26-27 


568 


7:12-13 


535 


31:1-6 


379 


11:4 


524 


7:18-29 


170 


31:2 


646 


11:20 


632 


7:19 


88 


31:7-8 


379 


12:21 


411 


8:1-14 


88 


31:9-13 


379 


14:6-10 


275n 


11:8-11 


356 


31:13 


167 


22:26-28 


264 


18:1 


206 


31:14-15 


380 


22:35 


264 


18:9 


305 


31:15 


261 


24:26-27 


264 


18:19 


291n 


31:16 


381 


24:32 


282 


18:31 


291n 


31:16-21 


380 






20:21-22 


305 


31:26 


167, 264 


Judges 




22:4-5 


262 


32 


177,380,386 


1:32 


129 

682 


22:12 


222 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



2 Samuel 




2 Kings 




2 Chronicles 


23:2 


70 


927 


411 


30:27 


448 


23:2-5 


170 


930 


560 


35:20-25 


411 






930-37 


439,471 


35:25 


411 


/ Kings 




1023-25 


458 


36 


411 


1:3 


270 


11:11 


130n 


36:15-16 


338, 401 


1:15 


270 


11:12 


265 






1:34 


234 


11:21 


275n 


Ezra 




1:39 


234 


14:1 


275n 


1 


443 


J 


464 


16:3 


308 


1:2-3 


449 


5:1-12 


424n 


19:21 


356 


3 


276 


5:17 


557 


23:3-5 


159 


3:17 


130n 


68 


130n 






4 


88 


6:20 


556 


l Chronicles 




4-1 


443 


7:15 


130n 


4-7 


206 


5-6 


276 


7:15-22 


261 


933 


221 


9:6 


449 


7:21 


130, 130n 


11:4 


129 






7:23-26 


155, 384 


12:20 


206 


Nehemiah 




7:39 


13Cn 


13:1 


206 


4 


88 


8:10-11 


392 


15:24 


230, 234 


5:12-13 


133 


8:39 


447-48 


15:25 


206 


6 


88 


8:43 


44s 


168-12 


387 


9:6 


266 


8:49 


44 s 


1628-31 


388 


9:9-11 


460-61 


9:13 


424n 


17:7-27 


514 


9:24 


129 


10:14 


350 


17:9 


310 


10:35-37 


357 


10:14-25 


350 


17:16-27 


170 


12:41 


230, 234 


10:24 


443 


21:18 


270 


B 


88 


10:26-29 


350 


22:18 


129 


13:4-12 


340 


11:1-8 


350 


23:30 


221 






12:28-30 


212 


24 


152, 509 


Esther 




13:20 


282 


25 


152, 464 


3-9 


308 


16:29-34 


87, 471 


26:26 


206 






17 


277 


27:1 


206 


Job 




17-18 


274 


28:1 


206 


1-2 


617 


17:1 


88, 337 


28:2 


70, 26 In 


1:6-11 


314 


17:3-6 


310 


28:11-19 


170 


1:12-21 


251 


18:4 


471 


29:6 


206 


1:21 


103 


18:13 


471 


29:11 


470 


1:22 


416 


18:36-40 


339 






2:1-5 


314 


19:18 


285 


2 Chronicles 




2:10 


416 


21:1-16 


471 


1:2 


206 


4:18 


393 


21:23-24 


439 


3:1 


354, 426, 464 


7:12 


304 


21:25-26 


87, 113 


3:15-17 


261 


9:5-6 


197 


22:11 


327n 


4:2-5 


385 


9:5-9 


75 


22:19-22 


409 


4:6 


385 


9:7 


196, 197 


22:19-23 


338 


4:10 


566 


9:7-9 


159 


22:20-22 


251 


4:14 


385 


14:18-19 


197 






4:19-22 


464 


15:15 


393 


2 Kings 




5:11-14 


392 


21:18 


426 


1:8 


276 


6:12-13 


38S 


21:20 


364 


l:9ff 


245 


6:14-42 


385 


23:10 


103 


1:9-12 


277 


7:1 


232 


25:5 


1% 


1:9-16 


339 


7:1-2 


385 


26:6 


247 


1:10 


525 


7:1-3 


392, 535 


26:12-13 


304 


1:12 


525 


9:13 


350 


26:13 


159 


2:9 


278 


11:15 


246, 447n 


27:16-17 


560 


2:9-14 


284n 


13:5 


514 


28:9-11 


197 


6:15-17 


353 


17:14-19 


206 


28:14 


244 


6:17 


222 


21:7 


514 


28:22 


247 


7:5-7 


247 


22:10 


308 


31:12 


247 


8:25 


275n 


26:19 


131 


3616 


244 


9:7 


471 


28:3 


308 


38-41 


204 


9:22 


87, 113,471 


28:9 


449 


38:6 


261n 


9:22-37 


88 


29:28-29 


229 


38:6-8 


261n 



683 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Job 




Psalms 




38:7 


81 


18:15 


1% 


38:16 


244 


18:16 


322 


38:31-33 


75, 159 


18:37-50 


88 


39:27-30 


320 


19:4-6 


260 


39:30 


241 


19:7 


389 


40 


342 


19:9 


470 


40:15-24 


304, 342 


201-2 


355 


41 


341 


22:12-13 


279 


41:1-34 


304, 342 


22:16 


279 


41:13 


244 


22:27 


388 


41:18-21 


251 


22:27-31 


117 


42 


342 


22:28 


387 






23:5 


321 


Psalms 




261 


291n 


1:3 


203 


29 


262 


1:4 


426 


32:14 


448 


1:4-6 , 


195n 


33:3 


175 


1:6 


483 


33:7 


244 


2 


106n, 117, 118, 


34:15-17 


250 




308, 354, 408, 


3416 


195n 




437, 486, 490, 


35 


195n 




492, S23 


35:1-8 


250 


2:1 


318 


35:5 


426 


2:1-6 


117 


35:17 


194 


2:2 


437-38 


35:22-26 


250 


2:2-6 


372 


36:6 


244 


2:7 


87 


36:7 


222, 320 


2:7-9 


309 


37 


366 


2:8 


388 


37:4-5 


250 


2:8-9 


117,486,579 


37:12-15 


195n 


2:8-12 


63 


40:3 


175 


2:9 


88 


42:2 


77 


2:10-12 


117 


42:10 


237 


2:11-12 


438 


43:1 


291n 


3:7 


195n 


45 


186 


5 


195n 


45:3 


488 


5:10 


250 


45:3-5 


186 


6:3 


194 


46 


248 


6:8-10 


195n 


46:4 


117 


7 


195n 


46:8 


192,403 


8 


510 


46:8-9 


488 


9:1-20 


355 


46:10 


117,489 


9:10 


250 


47:1-3 


117 


9:11 


323n 


47:2 


387 


9:14 


323n 


47:5 


234 


1015 


250 


47:7-8 


387 


1017-18 


250 


48:1-14 


355 


10:18 


291n 


50:10 


206, 507 


13:1-2 


194 


50:14-15 


250 


14:7 


355 


51:5 


124 


15:4 


195 


528 


276 


16 


170 


53:2-3 


125 


17:8 


222, 320 


54:7 


195n 


18 


292 


57:1 


222, 320 


18:3 


250 


58 


195n 


18:4 


322, 533 


58:3 


125 


18:5 


533 


59 


I95n 


18:6-15 


233 


59:12-13 


250 


18:7 


196 


60:2 


196 


18:8-14 


64 


61:4 


222, 320 


18:10 


155, 156, 183, 


62:12 


533 




203 


63:7 


222 


18:11 


222 


65:2 


117, 388 



Psalms 




65:7-8 


262 


66:4 


117, 388 


67:1-7 


388 


68 


195n 


68:1-4 


250 


68:17 


206, 222, 2sl 




260, 507 


68:21 


305 


68:31-32 


117 


69 


195n 


69:21 


617 


6922-28 


250 


69:25 


617 


69:34 


261 


69:35 


355 


11 


117 


722 


482 


73 


195n 


7410 


194 


74:13-14 


305 


74:13-15 


303 


75:3 


261 


75:8 


364 


75:10 


172, 327n 


76:3 


448 


77:16 


244 


78:5ff 


167 


78:25 


109 


79 


I95n 


791-3 


282 


79:5 


194 


803 


131 


80:4 


194 


80:7 


131 


80: 19 


131 


81:12 


633 


82:6 


278n 


82:8 


387 


83 


195n, 250 


84:10 


206, 507 


84:11 


260 


86:8-9 


388 


86:9 


117 


87:1-3 


355 


87:4 


280, 304 


88:11 


247 


89:10 


280, 304 


89:19-37 


87,514 


89:27 


62 


8927-29 


88 


89:46 


194 


90 


177 


90:4 


206, 507 


90:10 


646 


90:13 


194 


91:1-6 


402 


91:1-13 


222 


91:4 


222, 320 


91:11 


320 


91:11-13 


310 


91:13 


304, 502 


92 


386 



92:5 



387 



684 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Psalms 




Psalms 




92:12-14 


203 


145:18-19 


250 


94 


250 


146:6 


266 


94:3^1 


194 


147:18 


203 


96:1 


175 


148:7 


244, 304 


96:4-5 


237 


148:8 


203 


96:11-13 


482 


149:1 


175 


98:1 


175 


149:2 


323n 


98:1-3 


175 






99:1-9 


355 


Proverbs 




99:3 


388 


3:9-10 


357 


99:5 


261n,388 


3:20 


244 


99:9 


388 


66 


279n 


102:13-22 


355 


8:24 


244 


102:15-22 


117 


8:36 


246, 630, 659 


102:25-26 


197 


9:1-6 


363 


103:19 


52 


9:13-18 


363 


104:1-3 


260 


13:22 


560,632,661 


104:2 


154n, 297 


15:11 


247 


104:3 


64, 203 


16:4 


334 


104:5 


261n 


24:12 


533 


104:15 


191 


25:21-22 


627 


104:26 


304 


26:11 


279n, 578 


104:35 


195n,470 


27:20 


247 


106:9 


244 


28:8 


560 


106:15 


633 


30:15 


279n 


106:37-38 


308 


30:17 


241 


107:7 


448 


30:19 


279n 


107:23-32 


458 


30:24-31 


279n 


107:25 


2Q3 


31:21-22 


429 


109 


195n, 250 






110 


117n, 170 


Ecclesiastes 




111:2 


387 


2:26 


560 


113-18 


470 


9:10 


370 


114 


35, 531, 532 


12:2 


197 


115:3 


52 






115:4 


257 


Canticles (Song of Solomon 


115:5-8 


257 


1:2-4 


363 


117:1 


388 


3:11 


323n 


121: S-6 


222 


4:10 


363 


121:5-7 


402 


5:1 


363 


124:3-6 


322 


5:15 


261 


132:7 


261 


6:4 


298 


132:7-8 


70 


6:10 


298 


132:13-14 


70 


7:2 


363 


134:1 


221 


7:9 


363 


135:7 


203 


8:14 


579 


135:15 


257 






135:15-16 


341 


Isaiah 




135:16-18 


257 


1:5-23 


88 


137 


195n 


1:10 


281 


137:8 


450 


1:12 


273 


137:8-9 


250 


1:17 


291n 


138:4-5 


117 


1:21 


19, 281, 356, 


139:14 


387 




425 


139:19-22 


98, 195n 


1:24-31 


88 


139:19-24 


250 


2 


198 


140 


195n 


2:2-4 


354, 540, 556 


140:6-11 


250 


2:8-10 


268 


141:2 


174 


2:12-21 


88 


144:9 


175 


3:1-3 


268 


145:9 


626 


3:9 


281 


145:10-11 


117 


44-5 


222 


145:17 


387, 441 


5:1-7 


197, 374-75 



Isaiah 

5:30 196, 262 

61-3 160 

61-4 155 

6 3 388 

6:9-13 88 

6:13 207 

7:10-11 299 

7:14 299 

8:5-8 322 

8:8 524 

8:9-10 525 

8:14 435n 

8:16 389 

8:19-20 159 

8:20 389 

9:7 514 

10:5-14 251 

10:5-34 381n 

10:21-23 207 

11:1 170 

11:3-4 482 

11:4 76,486 

11:9 5n, 354, 498, 

511 

11:10 70 

11:12 16 

12 386 

13:6 409 

13:9 409 

13:9-10 405 

13:9-11 240 

13:10 1%, 197 

13:13-14 196 

13:19 240 

13:21 447 

14:12-15 240 

14:13 81,250 

14:13-15 458 

14:31 250 

16:5 514 

17:12 327 

17:12-13 262, 438 

17:13 426 

19:1 64 

19:19-25 463 

20:2 276 

22:15-25 126 

22:19 126 

22:21-22 126 

23:12 356 

23:15-17 20,424 

24 190 

2427 198 

24:1-6 498n 

24:7-12 463 

24:19-20 196 

24:19-23 240 

24:21-23 355 

2423 196 

25:4 222 

25:6-9 556 

26 297 

269 66, 115, 285, 
388 



685 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Isaiah 




Isaiah 




Jeremiah 




26:17 


299, 300 


53:7 


18 


4:15 


212 


26:17-21 


305 


53:10 


216 


4:23-31 


197,5*1 


26:20-21 


88 


54 


297 


4:30 


471,560 


27:1 


305 


5411 


261n 


430-31 


439 


28:16 


435n 


5411-12 


429, 560 


5:14 


277 


30:7 


304 


5413-17 


560 


6:1 


234, 250 


32 


636, 638, 643, 


57:3 


115 


6:17 


234 




663 


57:5 


388 


6:22 


250 


321-8 


636 


57:15 


388 


6:23 


262 


32:5 


636 


57:20 


262, 327 


7:1-7 


88 


34:4 


197,541 


57:20-21 


438 


7:9-10 


258 


344-5 


240 


58:1 


234 


7:12-15 


88 


349-lo 


365,461, 529 


59:16-20 


355 


7:33-34 


241 


34:10 


453,472 


59:19 


322 


7:34 


463 


34:10-14 


447 


60:1-2 


297 


8:1-2 


282 


36:17 


129 


60:1-3 


160, 561, 571 


8:11-12 


88 


37:19 


257 


60:5-6 


561-62 


8:16 


212 


37:22 


356 


60:5-11 


429 


9:15 


240 


40:2 


450 


60:9 


562 


10:6-7 


387 


40:17 


162 


60:11 


562 


10:10 


77 


40:25 


126 


60:12 


117,488 


10:16 


273, 387 


41:1-4 


204 


60:14 


128 


10:18 


129 


41:5 


197 


6019-21 


561 


10:22 


250 


41:15-16 


197 


61:3 


203 


11:9-13 


88 


41:25 


204 


61:8 


258 


11:16 


276 


42:10-13 


175 


62:2 


110 


13:16 


285 


42:12 


285 


63:1-6 


375-76, 487 


13:20 


250 


43:11 


451 


63:9 


100 


13:26 


439 


44:6 


67,77, 100 


63:13 


244, 261 


14:10-12 


334 


44:24-25 


159 


64:6 


630 


14:16 


282 


44:27 


244 


65 


543 


15:1 


334 


45:23 


264 


65:17 


543 


15:2 


334, 335' 


46:9-10 


162 


65:17-25 


538-39 


15:3 


17 


46:11 


204 


65:20 


646 


16:3-4 


241, 282 


47:2-3 


439 


65:20-23 


543 


169 


463 


47:4 


387 


65:22 


35 


17:5-8 


203 


47:6-11 


450-51 


66 


297, 543 


17:7-8 


403 


47:8-15 


159 


66:1 


70, 26 In 


18:7-10 


11 


48:4 


431 


66:6 


397n 


19:7 


241 


48:12 


77, 100 


66:7-8 


308, 323 


23 


358 


48:20 


449 


66:21-22 


543 


23:5-6 


483 


49-50 


297 


66:22-23 


543 


23:14 


281 


49:1-2 


485 


66:23 


388 


23:15 


240 


49:6 


215 


66:24 


578 


23:18 


338 


49:8-13 


223 






25:9 


250 


49:10 


403 


Jeremiah 




25:10 


426, 463 


49:12 


555 


1:14 


129 


25:15-16 


364 


49:22-23 


563 


1:14-15 


250 


25:26 


250 


4926 


401 


1:18 


130 


25:28-29 


453 


51-52 


355 


2-3 


428 


28:9 


483 


51:3 


556 


22-3 


357 


29:23 


265 


51:6 


197 


2 5 


257 


309 


87,514 


51:9 


280 


2:20 


19 


31:4 


356 


51:9-10 


305 


2:20-24 


425-26 


31:10-37 


355 


51:10 


244 


2:20-3:11 


356 


31:21 


356 


51:13 


261n 


2:30-33 


426 


31:33-34 


640 


51:15 


540 


2:32 


357 


34:18-20 


241 


51:15-16 


197, 540-541 


3-4 


297 


425 


265 


51:16 


222, 261n, 540 


3:1-3 


426 


42:11 


335 


51:17 


364 


45-8 


234 


46:7-8 


322 


52:10 


217 


45-31 


88 


46:20 


250 


52:11-12 


449 


4:11-13 


439 


46:24 


250 


53 


595, 613 


4:13 


227, 241 


47:2 


250, 322 



686 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Jeremiah 




Ezekiel 




Ezekiel 




48:40 


320 


5:17 


191 


2226 


273 


49:12 


364 


6:13 


522n 


22:27 


397, 398 


49:13 


264 


7 


21 


22:29 


258 


50-5] 


423, 431 


7:7 


129 


22:31 


522n 


50:8 


449 


7:18 


522n 


23 


21, 23, 114, 426 


50:15 


450 


8 


23 


23:8 


397 


50:29 


450 


8:3 


327, 522n 


23:14-16 


427 


50:38 


407n 


8:16 


152n 


23:15 


522n 


51:6 


449 


9 


21, 23, 205, 206 


23:20 


427 


51:7 


364, 430 


9:4-6 


31,342 


23:22 


439 


51:9 


273,449 


9:10 


522n 


23:25-30 


439 


51:13 


423 


10 


21, 155, 338 


23:29 


439 


51:25 


238 


10:1 


522n 


23:31-34 


364 


51:27 


246 


10:11 


522n 


23:40 


471 


51:32 


407n 


10:12 


429 


23:42 


522n 


51:34 


304 


1018-19 


552 


24:23 


522n 


51:36 


407n 


11:21 


522n 


26:7 


250 


51:42 


238 


11:22-23 


552 


26:19-21 


244 


51:61-64 


461 


12 


21 


11 


21 






13:1-16 


417 


27:12-24 


454 


Lamentations 


13:18 


522n 


27:13 


456 


l 


297 


14:12 


17 


27:22 


522n 


1:8 


m 


14:19 


398 


27:30 


522n 


1:8-9 


w 


14:21 


17, 191 


28:11-19 


463 


1:15 


356 


15 


21 


28:13 


150,429,463, 


2:11 


553 


16 


21, 23, 114, 297, 




557 


2:13 


356 




426-27 


28:13-14 


354 


3:15 


240 


16:1-14 


464 


29:18 


522n 


3:19 


240 


16:6-16 


424 


31:4 


244 


3:44 


222 


16:8 


266n 


31:15 


244 


4:19 


241 


16:11-14 


429 


32:7 


196 


4:21 


364 


16:12 


522n 


32:7-8 


64, 240, 405 






16:14-15 


19 


32:8 


197 


Ezekiel 




16:15-43 


356 


32:11-12 


240 


l 


21, 155, 338 


16:17 


427 


32:27 


522n 


1 


4 


250, 260 


16:20 


308 


33:1-6 


234 


l 


4-5 


155 


16:25 


427, 522n 


33:4 


522n 


l 


7 


260 


16:26 


427 


34:23-24 


87,514 


1 


10 


156 


16:26-29 


427 


36:33-36 


556, 569 


1 


22 


155, 522n 


16:31 


522n 


37 


21,536 


1 


24 


247, 424, 473 


16:33-34 


427 


37:1-14 


88, 283 


1 


25 


522n 


16:37 


439 


37:24-28 


87 


l 


25-28 


259 


16:37-41 


439 


37 :26-28 


546 


1 


26 


155, 384, 522n 


16:39 


439 


38 


536 


i 


26-28 


150, 186 


16:43 


522n 


38-39 


21,520-24 


l 


27 


260 


16:43-45 


430 


38:2 


522n 


1 


27-28 


260 


16:44-48 


431 


38:3 


522, 522n 


2 


21, 22 


16:46 


281 


38:4-5 


521 


2-3 


21 


16:49-50 


395 


38:6 


250,522 


2:2 


70 


17:4 


522n 


38:11-13 


521 


2:3-10 


168 


17:19 


522n 


3sl5 


250, 521 


3:3 


268 


17:22 


522n 


38:19-20 


285 


3:7 


431 


20:5 


483 


38:20 


197 


3:13 


247 


205-6 


264 


39 


21, 490, 536 


3:14 


268, 326 


20:8 


398 


39:1 


522n 


3:15 


23 


20:13 


398 


39:2 


250 


3:24 


70 


20:21 


398 


39:3 


522 


3:27 


577 


21:19 


522n 


399 


522 


4:10 


189 


21:21 


522n 


39:9-10 


522 


5 


21 


21:31 


398 


39:17-20 


241, 490 


5:1 


522n 


22:3-4 


397 


40 


23 


5:1-12 


415 


22:6 


397 


40-43 


21,212, 273 


5 


11 


430 


22:12 


397 


40-48 


21,536 



687 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Ezekiel 




Daniel 




Joel 




40:1 


522n 


7:25 


274, 321 


2:4-10 


246 


40:18 


130n 


7:27 


573 


2:10 


196, 197,240 


40:40ff 


130n 


8 


88 


2:11 


409 


41:2 


130n 


8:9-11 


81 


2:15 


234, 289 


41:26 


1 3on 


8:10 


197 


2:28-29 


398 


42:12 


522 


9:6 


291 


2:28-32 


240, 267n, 392 


43:1-3 


204 


9:10 


291 


2:30 


267 


43:1-5 


552 


9:16 


197n 


2:31 


196,409 


43:2 


260, 424, 446 


9:24 


5, 6n, 274, 442 


3:13 


374 


43:12 


522n 


9:24-27 


5,502 


3:15 


196, 197 


44:17-18 


279n 


926-27 


439 






44:18 


522n 


10 


74,311 


Amos 




44:20 


522n 


10:5-6 


311 


1:9 


424n 


46:19 


130n 


10:5-11 


73 


2:9 


35 


47 


21 


10:9-11 


77 


3:7 


291, 338 


47:1-2 


130n 


10:12-13 


311 


4:6-11 


234 


47:1-9 


567 


10:13 


81,333 


4:13 


387 


47:11 


519 


10:20 


333 


5:2 


446 


47:12 


568 


10:20-21 


81,311 


5:7 


240 


48:30-35 


211 


11 


88 


5:8 


75, 159 


48:31-34 


554, 555 


11:35 


214 


5:18-20 


269,409 






12:1 


312,413 


6:8 


264 


Daniel 




12:1-3 


214 


8:9 


1 %, 405 


1:11-21 


103 


12:3 


553 


9:11-12 


462-63 


2 


287, 296 


12:4 


43, 263, 576 






2:31-45 


68,328 


12:7 


264, 274, 321 


Obadiah 




2:32-35 


354 


12:11-12 


275n 


15 


462 


2:34 


38 










2:34-35 


556 


Hoses 




Jonah 




2:35 


139, 507 


l 


1 


1:2 


449 


2:37 


279 


1-4 


297 


1:3 


337 


2:37-38 


346n 


1-8 


321 


1:10 


337 


2:44 


270 


1:9 


19 


2:5-6 


244 


2:44-45 


354, 556 


2 


428 


3:5-10 


424n 


2:45 


139 


2-3 


15 


3:6 


276 


.! 


339 


2:10 


439 






3:1 


346 


3:5 


87, 514 


Micah 




4 


106n 


4-7 


15 


1:1-15 


207 


4:33 


279 


4:1 


129 


1:2 


265 


4:35 


52 


4:1-2 


258 


1:2-7 


88 


5:7 


429 


4:3 


129 


3:6 


196 


5:16 


429 


5:10 


322 


4 


297 


5:21 


279n 


62 


337 


4:1-4 


354,556, 569 


5:23 


258 


6:5 


485 


4:9-5:9 


300 


5:25-28 


463n 


8-9 


15 






5:25-31 


258 


8:1 


227, 241 


Nahum 




5:29 


429 


9:1 


19, 426 


1:2-8 


65 


7 


74, 296, 306 


9:10 


257 


1:4-8 


197 


7:1-6 


328 


10-14 


15 


1:5 


196 


7:1-8 


306 


10:6-8 


198-99 


1:6 


198 


7:3-7 


303 


11:1 


217 


3:4 


20n, 424 


7:3-8 


280 


11:9 


388 


3:5 


439 


7:6 


329 


13:15-16 


m3-4 






7:7 


328 


14:9 


387 


Habakkuk 




7:9 


154n 






1:2 


194 


7:9-10 


72-73 


Joel 




1:5-17 


185 


7:12 


306 


1:2 


129 


1:8 


227,241,321 


7:13 


66 


1:3-2:5 


339 


2:6 


194 


7:13-14 


50, 68, 73, 174, 


1:4 


184 


i 


143, 184,386 




306, 371,487, 


1.6 


246 


3:3-4 


184 




502 


1:14 


129 


3:5 


184 


7:16-25 


280 


2:1 


129, 234 


3:6 


184 


7:21-22 


331 


2:1-2 


409, 413 


3:8 


184 



688 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Habakkuk 




3:9 


185, 186 


3:10 


184 


3:10-13 


77 


3:11 


185, 186 


3:12 


185 


3:13 


305 


3:15 


184 


3:16 


185 


Zephaniah 




1 


88 


1:8 


129 


1:14-15 


371 


1:14-18 


409 


2:11 


197 


3:12-13 


358 


Haggai 




1-2 


276 


1:13 


338 


25 


261 


2:6 


413,414 


2:6-7 


285 


2:7 


222 


2:10-14 


566n 


Zechariah 




1:6 


291 



Zechariah 






Zechariah 




1:8 


184 




14 


412 


1:12 


194 




14:7 


260, 483 


1:18 


184 




14:8-11 


569 


1:18-21 


38, 327n, 464 


14:9 


289 


2:1-5 


273 




14:15 


285 


3-4 


276 




14:16-21 


222 


3:1-10 


314 




14:20-21 


376 


3:8 


170 








4:1-5 


58n, 


60, 276 


Malachi 




46 


276 




1:6-14 


340 


4:10 


58n 




2-3 


340 


5:5-11 


428 




2:7 


499 


6.1-7 


183 




2:14 


265 


6:5 


173, 


197 


3:1 


338, 499 


9:7 


143 




3:2 


198 


9:9-17 


355 




3:2-3 


74 


9:10 


143 




3:5-17 


339 


12 


385 




3:6 


59 


12:2 
12:6 


385 
385 




3:7-9 


340 


12:9 


412 




3:8-9 


340 


12:10 


398 




4:1-2 


571 


12:10-11 


412 




4:1-3 


260 


12:10-14 


50,66 


4:2 


159, 205,260 


13 


412 






489 


13:1-3 


339 




4:4-5 


277 


13:4 


276 




4:5 


512 



NEW TESTAMENT 



4i 


tthew 




Matthew 




Matthew 




1:1 


275n 


5:17-20 


337 


11:25 


334 


1 


1-17 


333 


5:44-45 


627 


11:25-27 


123 


1 


8 


275n 


610 


163,575 


12:22-29 


312 


1 


11-12 


275n 


6:13 


470 


12:24 


317 


1 


17 


275 


6:33 


560 


12:26-28 


317 


1 


18 


298 


7:6 


578 


12:28 


317,500,501 


1 


23 


298 


7:15 


337 


12:28-29 


500 


2 


2 


16a 


7:15-23 


123 


12:30 


474 


2 


11 


303n 


7:22-23 


338 


12:36 


631 


2 


13-18 


308 


7:23 


125,483 


12:38-45 


447 


2 


13-21 


310 


8:11-12 


131, 274 


1241-45 


245 


2 


14f 


217 


8:16 


317 


12:43 


87, 446 


215 


281 


8:29 


501 


13:11-17 


267 


2:16 


217, 303n 


8:31 


317 


13:13 


505-6 


3:1-2 


361 


9:8 


361 


13:13-15 


136 


3:4 


276 


9:9 


356 


13:20-21 


123 


3:17 


117n, 500 


9:17 


398 


13:24-30 


504, 634 


4:1 


87 


9:33-34 


317 


13:31-32 


507, 635 


4:3 


500 


9:37-38 


373 


13:31-33 


502n 


4:6 


500 


10:1 


317 


13:36-43 


634 


4:8ff 


500 


10:8 


317 


13:37 


634 


48-9 


333 


1015 


217 


13:37-43 


519 


4:10 


479 


10:17-18 


362 


14:3-12 


282 


4:11 


316 


1022 


104 


14:10 


512 


5:10-12 


18 


10:32-33 


125 


15:1-9 


337 


5:13 


135 


10:38 


356 


15:3-9 


341 


5:13-16 


502n 


11:13 


512 


15:6 


315 


5:14-16 


562 


11:14 


278, 512 


15:7-9 


340 


5 


16 


285, 361 


ll:20ff 


217 


15:21-28 


137n 



689 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Matthew 




Matthew 




Matthew 




15:27-28 


624 


23:38 


457,617 


27:50 


300n 


15:31 


361 


24 


20, 31, 182, 202, 


27:50-54 


254 


16:3 


136 




217, 275, 520, 


27:51 


273, 291 


16:7 


533 




541 


27:51-53 


285 


16:18 


236, 313-14 


24:1-2 


131, 183 


27:62-66 


422 


16:19 


231 


24:3-5 


20 


28:16-20 


354 


16:23 


501 


24:4-13 


68 


28:18 


39, 69, 105, 317, 


1624 


357 


24:5 


336 




492, 530 


16:27-28 


577 


24:6 


182 


28:18-20 


139, 173,284, 


16:28 


69 


246-7 


184 




510, 543 


17:2 


260 


24:6-8 


20 


28:19 


63 


17:5 


117n 


24:7 


182 






17:10-13 


278,512 


24:8 


223 


Mark 




17:17 


381 


24:9-13 


20, 182 


1:6 


276 


17:20 


197n 


24:10-12 


123 


1:11 


117n, 500 


18:6 


460 


24:11 


336 


1:14-15 


69, 361 


18:16 


276 


24:13 


202 


1:15 


267 


18:18 


231 


24:14 


207, 362, 363 


124 


501 


19:12 


356 


2414-27 


20 


1:34 


273, 501 


19:17 


388 


24:15 


439, 446, 457, 


1:39 


273 


19:28 


152, 510 




541,550 


1:44 


66 


20-25 


238 


2415-16 


183 


2:22 


398 


20:16 


123 


2415-25 


201 


3:11 


300n, 501 


21:5 


354 


24:15-31 


182 


3:14-19 


152 


21:8 


218 


24:16-21 


449 


3:15 


273 


21:12 


273 


24:19-31 


485 


4:5-17 


123 


21:12-13 


218,448 


24:21 


114, 184,220, 


4:11-12 


123, 334 


21:19 


218, 457 




413 


4:26-29 


372 


21:21 


197n, 460 


24:24 


338 


5:7 


300n,501 


21:21-22 


238, 239 


24:28 


241, 489 


5:10 


501 


21:33-43 


6, 281 


24:28-31 


20 


5:25-34 


566n 


21:33-44 


432 


2429 


321 


6:7 


246 


21:33-45 


197,199 


24:29-30 


197 


6:13 


273 


21:4245 


435n 


24:30 


50, 64, 66, 287 


614-29 


280 


21M 


218, 287, 443, 


24:30-31 


372 


6:16 


512 




457, 633 


2432-34 


197 


6:39 


191n 


21:44 


38 


24:34 


6, 51, 114, 183, 


7:1-13 


337 


22:7 


295,409 




220 


7:1-23 


430 


22:11 


136 


2437-39 


540 


7:26-28 


578 


22:14 


122 


24:42-43 


542 


7:27-28 


498n 


22:37-40 


162n 


24:42-44 


410 


8:38 


125 


22:43 


70 


24:51 


66 


9:1-29 


332 


22:44 


117n 


25:13 


457 


9:7 


117n 


23-25 


66 


25:21 


511 


9:24 


300n 


23:9 


32 


25:23 


511 


9:38 


357 


23:15 


465 


25:31-32 


530 


9:42 


460 


23:25 


281 


25:46 


573 


943-48 


578 


23:25-28 


430 


26:14-15 


18, 422 


1021 


357 


23:29-35 


432 


2627 


290 


10:28 


357 


23:29-38 


19 


26:28 


398 


10:48 


30Qn 


23:29-39 


183 


26:38 


501 


11:15 


273 


23:31-36 


401 


26:47 


422 


11:15-17 


218 


23:32-35 


449 


26:53 


316 


11:17 


258 


23:33 


184 


26:57-68 


422 


11:23 


197n 


23:34 


193 


26:62 


66 


12:36 


117n 


23:34-36 


6 


26:64 


117n, 362 


13 


182, 275 


23:34-37 


194, 465, 466 


27:1-2 


422 


13:2 


183 


23:34-38 


281 


27:20-25 


422 


13:7 


182 


23:35 


398 


27:25 


226 


13:8 


182 


23:35-36 


236, 291, 390 


27:27-31 


282 


13:9-13 


182 


23:35-37 


184, 194 


27:39-44 


282 


13:14 


183, 439 


23:36 


184 


27:40-43 


501 


13:14-23 


201 


23:37-38 


372 


27:41-43 


422 


13:14-27 


182 



690 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Mark 




13:26 


602 


13:30 


183, 220 


14:21 


457 


1423 


290 


1424 


398 


1458 


272 


14:62 


64, 11 7n 


15:13 


300n 


15:23 


364-65 


15:29-32 


282 


15:37-39 


254 


1619 


117n 


Luke 




1:6 


475n 


1:8-11 


230 


1:10 


174, 230 


1:15-17 


278 


1:17 


512 


1:21 


230 


1:32-33 


514, 579 


1:50 


361 


1:51-55 


298 


1:78 


159,205,260 


2:14 


646 


2:30 


217 


2:38 


217 


2:68 


571-72 


2:78-79 


571-72 


3:22 


117n, 500 


4:1-13 


308 


43 


500 


4:5ff 


500 


4:9 


500 


413 


501 


4:16 


54, 290 


4:18 


136 


4:20 


290 


4:25 


277 


4:25-26 


321 


4:25-27 


123 


4:28-29 


308 


4:34 


501 


5:37 


398 


6:20-26 


18 


6:35-36 


626, 627 


8:13 


123 


8:26-33 


327 


8:27 


446 


8:28 


501 


8:31 


244, 501 


8:31-33 


280 


9:9 


512 


9:23 


357 


9:31 


281 


9:35 


117n 


10:1 


217,276 


10:5-16 


143 


10:12ff 


217 


1017-19 


158, 246 


10:17-20 


316 


1018-19 


501 


1019 


306n, 503 



Luke 

11:11-12 306n 

11:20 500,501, 

11:20-22 500 

11:49-51 6 

11:50 398 

12:5 361 

12:8-9 125 

12:35-40 410 

12:45^8 630 

12:47^-8 627.630, 631, 

661 

1248 511 

13:3 194 

13:24-29 274 

13:28-29 510 

13:29 555 

13:33 281 

13:33-34 401,466 

1423 137n 

1610-12 511 

16:19 429 

16:22 366 

16:27-31 253 

1629-31 337 

17:1 123 

17:2 460 

17:15-19 285 

17:22 66 

17:26-27 540 

18:8 52, 647 

18:9-14 88 

18:43 285 

19:14 361 

19:17 511 

1926 127 

19:45-46 218 

20:42-43 117n 

21 182, 275 

21:5 454 

21:5-6 183 

21:9 182 

21:10 182 

21:10-11 184 

21:11 182,253 

21:12-19 182 

21:18 202 

21:20 184,257,258, 

439 

21:20-24 183, 201 

21:20-27 182 

21:22 194, 442, 471 

21:24 89, 131, 274 

21:24-29 274 

21:25 262 

21:28 449 

21:29-32 197 

21:31 449 

21:32 183, 220 

22:17 290 

22:19 290 

22:20 398 

22:22 123 

2229-30 510 



Luke 

22:30 510 

22:31 567 

22:43 316 

22:63-65 282 

22:69 117n 

23:8-12 282 

23:12 282, 438 
23:27-30 199, 246 

23:28-31 335 

23:35-39 282 

23:44-47 254 

24:25-27 300, 513 

24:49-51 502 

2450-S1 552 

John 

1:1 In, 484 

1:4-5 446,572 

1:5 244, 327 

1:9 446 

1:9-2:11 2n 

1;14 281,446,484, 

546 

1:15 3oon 

1:18 343 

1:29 In, 18, 172 

1:49 117n 

1:51 260,422 

2:4 457 

26 2 

2:13-16 218 

2:13-22 448 

2:15 273 

2:19 272 

2:19-20 2 

2:19-21 281 

3:8 203 

3:13 446 

3:16 8, 122, 137, 632 

3:16-17 215 

3:17 67 

3:18 124 

3:27-34 278 

3:31 446 

3:34 173 

3:36 66, 124, 626 

4:14 549, 569 

4:35-36 372 

5:2 2 

5:3-4 401n 

5:5 2 

5:6 18 

5:9 18 

5:21 457 

5:24 104,122,532 

5:24-25 516, 568-69 

5:24-29 104n 

5:27 446, 530 

5:28-29 515, 533 

5:39 300 

5:45-46 300, 513 

5:45-47 337 

5:46 102 



691 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



John 




John 




Acts 




6:7 


2 


16:20-22 


300 


4:1-3 


342 


6:9 


2 


16:33 


68,220 


4:8-12 


448 


6:13 


2 


17 


148, 626 


4:12 


9 


6:35-40 


122 


17:1 


457 


4:15-18 


342 


6:37-39 


123 


17:2 


446 


4:24-28 


106, 337 


6:38 


446 


17:14-15 


68 


4:25-26 


]17n 


6:38-40 


517 


18:15-16 


2 


4:26 


258 


6:39-40 


502n 


18:24 


432 


4:27-28 


123, 438 


6:44 


123,517,661 


18:32 


53 


5:5 


284 


6:53-57 


138-39 


18:36 


515 


5:17-18 


342 


6:54 


517 


19:12-15 


341 


5:27-32 


448 


6:57 


315 


19:13 


41 In 


5:27-33 


342 


6:58 


446 


19:13-22 


347 


5:30 


99n, 567 


7:13 


284 


19:14 


2 


5:40 


342 


7:28 


3cQn 


19:15 


283, 332, 428 


6:5 


97 


7:30 


457 


19:23 


2 


6:8-15 


342 


7:37 


In 


19:30 


413, 548 


6:9-15 


103, 337 


7:37-39 


223, 549, 569 


19:31 


602 


7:15-16 


282 


8:12 


357, 446, 572 


19:34 


66, 549 


7:37 


283 


8:20 


457 


19:37 


50,66 


7:38 


542 


8:39-44 


102 


19:38 


284 


7:42-43 


633 


8:42-47 


337 


20:12 


in 


7:44 


141,388,389 


8:44 


314, 337, 357 


20:17 


473 


7:51-52 


194, 258, 2$3, 


8:57 


2 


20:19 


284 




466 


9:5 


446 


20:22 


283, 344 


7:51-53 


432 


10:4-5 


357, 483 


20:23 


231 


7:51-60 


342 


10:18 


In, 446 


21:11 


2 


7:52 


401 


10:22 


217 


21:14 


2 


7:54-60 


282 


10:27 


357 


21:15-17 


2 


7:58-60 


258 


1027-30 


122 


21:19 


53 


8:1 


362 


10:28-29 


70 


21:22 


357 


8:9 


258 


10:34-36 


278n 






8:9-24 


338 


11:9 


446 


Acts 




8:11 


258 


11:24-25 


517 


1:15-26 


152 


9:23 


342 


11:25-26 


547 


2 


373, 552 


9:29 


342 


12:13 


218, 300n 


2:2 


203 


10:35 


361 


12:15 


354 


2:2-11 


439n 


10:39 


99n, 567 


12:23 


361,457 


2:4 


439 


1042 


530 


12:25 


315 


2:9 


30 


1043 


513 


12:31 


317, 333, 500 


2:16-17 


540 


1045 


398 


12:31-32 


361 


2:16-21 


240,267.392 


11:18 


362 


12:33 


53 


2:17-18 


140, 398:502 


12:1-3 
12:3 
12:7 
12:12 

13:6-11 


106, 337 


12:34 


117n 


2:17-21 


149 


362 
52 
363 
258,338 


12:37-40 


334 


2:19 


64 


12:3940 


123 


2:19-20 


502 


12:42 


284 


2:23 


258 


13:8 


106, 337 


12:44 


3C0n 


2:24-36 


87 


13:10 


103 


12:46 


446 


2:25-36 


170, 275n 


13:14 


30 


13:2 


308 


2:26 


437 


13:22-23 


87 


13:27 


308 


2:29-36 


69, 139,519 


13:27 


54, 300 


13:38 


2 


2:30-36 


494 


13:29 


99n, 567 


14:2-3 


310 


2:32-36 


6 2 


13:33 


117n 


14:23 


545 


2:33 


398, 502 


13:45 


341 


14:30 


500 


2:34-35 


117n 


13:45-50 


342 


15:1-10 


123 


2:36 


258 


13:46-48 


362 


15:3 


315 


2:3740 


448 


13:48 


123, 334 


15:6 


534 


2:40 


381 


14:1 


30 


15:18-20 


68 


2:43 


284 


14:2-5 


103, 337, 342 


15:25 


579 


3:14-15 


258 


14:5 


106 


16:7 


502 


3:19-26 


448 


14:15 


361 


16:8-11 


361 


3:20-23 


281 


14:22 


68, 220 


16:11 


500 


3:24 


300 


15:14-19 


462 


16:13 


59a 


3:26 


362 


15:21 


54 



692 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Acts 



Romans 



Romans 



i 5:22-40 


363 


1:16 


362 


9:10-13 


626 


15:28-29- 


108, 116 


1:18 


661 


9:10-26 


123 


16:4 


30 


1:18-32 


258 


9:13 


334 


17:1-4 


30 


1:20 


204 


917-22 


629 


17:5-8 


103, 106,280, 


1:22-25 


358 


918 


624 




337,342 


1:24 


634 


920-21 


442 


17 


7 


9 


124-32 


329 


9:22 


632 


17 


10-12 


30 


1:26 


634 


927 


300n 


17 


13 


342 


1:28 


634 


9:27-28 


207 


17 


17 


30 


1:32 


475n 


933 


354 


17 


24-31 


361, 661 


2 


128, 340 


10:7 


244 


17 


25 


162 


2:4 


626 


10:18 


362 


17 


28 


141 


2:6 


631 


11 


269n,463, 617, 


17 


31 


530 


2:6-13 


533 




649, «49n, 


18 


4 


30 


2:7-9 


236 




650n 


18 


6 


103, 337 


2:8-9 


237 


11:2 


123 


18 


8 


30 


29 


362 


11:5 


207 


18 


12-13 


103, 106, 337 


2:11 


629 


11:5-10 


123 


18 


17 


342 


2:11-14 


631 


11:7-10 


334 


18 


19 


30 


2:11-16 


622 


11:7-24 


128 


18 


24-28 


30 


2:17-24 


424, 443 


11:11-12 


66, 388 


19 


94 


2:19 


363 


11:11-15 


242 


19:1-10 


30 


2:19-20 


458 


11:11-24 


102 


19:9 


103 


2:20-23 


340 


11:12 


128 


19:13-15 


94, 258 


2:21 


258 


11:15 


66, 128, 388 


19:13-16 


338 


2:21-22 


340 


11:20-23 


581 


19:17 


30, 284 


224 


363,471 


11:23-24 


66 


19:18 


94 


2:28-29 


102 


11:23-32 


128, 388 


19:19 


94 


3:2 


542 


11:25 


242 


19:28 


300n 


3:4 


317 


11:26 


354 


19:32 


300n 


3:10-12 


125 


11:36 


67 


19:34 


300n 


3:15 


398 


12 


5% 


19:37 


340 


3:21-22 


513 


12:1-2 


485 


20:3 


342 


3:23 


123, 125, 169 


12:20 


627 


20:7 


476 


3:24 


579 


13:1-4 


105 


20:19 


343 


4:11 


206 


13:8 


628 


2028-31 


95 


4:13 


132 


13:8-10 


96 


21:11 


106, 337 


4:17 


53 


13:11-12 


570 


21:27-36 


103, 337 


5:3 


220 


13:12 


260 


22:18 


52 


5:5 


398 


14:12 


533 


22:20 


398 


5:8 


624 


15:12 


503 


2222-23 


342 


5:8-10 


122 


15:21 


66 


23:12 


342 


5:9-10 


567 


16:5 


357 


23:20-21 


342 


5:12-19 


124 


16:20 


52,317,502 


24:1-9 


103,106,337 


5:15-21 


567 


16:25-26 


292 


24:15 


515,517 


5:16 


475n 






24:27 


342 


5:18 


475n 


/ Corinthians 


25:2-3 


103, 106,337 


5:19-20 


628 


1:18-21 


660 


25:4 


52 


6:4 


517 


1:27-31 


123 


25:7 


103, 337 


6:4-14 


518 


26-8 


520 


25:9 


106, 337 


69 


77 


27-8 


308 


25:24 


106, 337 


6:23 


124 


2:14-15 


136 


26:13 


260 


8:4 


475n 


2:14-16 


660 


26:18 


136, 246, 503 


8:11 


518 


3:11-15 


630 


26:21 


342 


8:18-23 


629 


3:12-15 


136 


28:17-29 


342 


8:28 


100, 629 


3:13 


533 


28:23-29 


362 


8:28-39 


39, 122 


3:16 


58n, 272, 544-45 


28:28 


503 


8:29 


343, 472, 483 


3:21-22 


140 






8:29-30 


140, 278n 


3:22 


548 


Remans 




8:32 


140 


6:1-2 


576 


1:1-3 


513 


8:34 


117n 


6:9 


55 


1:5 


284 


8:35 


220 


7:16 


628 


1:1 


i 


362 


8:35-39 


70 


8:3 


483 



693 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 







tians 




Ephesians 




8:4 


108n 


2:1-9 


362 


4:17-5:7 


550 


8:9-10 


108n 


2:9 


30 


4:18 


315 


9:27 


123 


3 


265 


4:24 


122, 140, 196, 


10:1-2 


384 


3:7-9 


102-3 




267, 278n, 


10:1-4 


281,449 


3:8 


214 




343 


101-12 


123 


3:13 


99n, 133, 568 


4:24-27 


357 


10:10 


247 


3:26 


131 


4:30 


205, 206 


10:16-17 


476 


3:26-29 


103,463 


5:3-12 


94 


10:20 


108n 


3:27 


122, 206 


5:14 


159, 205 


10:21 


108n 


3:29 


132, 525 


5:22-33 


33 


11:10 


231,318 


4:3 


542 


5:25 


162n 


11:20-34 


476 


4:4 


267 


5:25-27 


473 


11:24 


290 


4:6 


300n 


6:8 


533 


11:25 


191 


4 9 


542 


6:17 


485 


12:28 


292 


4:22-26 


323 






13:12 


392 


4:22-31 


87, 131,373, 


Philippians 




14:3 


469 




545 


1:6 


70 


14:40 


163 


425-26 


456 


2:9-10 


530 


15 


338 


5:6 


533 


2:10 


530, 661 


15:20-22 


100 


5:19-26 


550 


2:10-11 


180 


15:20-23 


517 


5:21 


550 


2:12 


117n 


15:22-26 


502n 


6:16 


220 


2:12-13 


70, 475, 533 


15:22-28 


104 






2:15 


81,553 


15:25 


117n, 139,507 


Ephesians 




2:17 


390 


15:26 


534 


1:4 


435 


3:2 


578 


15:32 


343 


1:4-5 


123 


3:2-3 


102 


15:41 


298 


1:4-6 


624 


3:20 


318, 332,545 


15:50-55 


149 


1:4-14 


122 


3:21 


545 


15:51-54 


502n 


1:9-10 


267 


4:13 


314 


15:54 


100 


1:11 


52, 123 


4:22 


330 


15:55-58 


547 


1:13 


2435, 206 






15:58 


460 


1:20 


117n, 143,332 


Colossians 




16:15 


357 


1:20-22 


50,64,89, 139, 


1:5-6 


362 


16:22 


185n, 580 




284, 318, 510, 


1:12-13 


572 








518 


1:13 


64,69, 139,510. 


2 Corinthians 


1:21 


487 




518 


1:3-7 


39 


1:21-22 


69 


1:15 


343 


1:20 


133 


2:1 


104 


1:15-18 


133 


1:21-22 


205, 206 


2:1-3 


120, 125 


1:15-20 


267 


2:14-16 


235 


2:2 


412 


1:17 


628 


3:7-18 


131 


2:4-6 


104 


1:18 


62 


3:15 


54 


2:5-6 


517 


1:19-20 


538 


3:18 


149, 298, 570 


26 


64,89, 149,284, 


1:21-23 


70 


4:3-4 


136 




318, 332,484, 


1:23 


362 


4:4 


572 




510,514,518 


1:24 


68, 100 


4 6 


131, 196,260, 


2:8-9 


533, 623 


2:4 


568 




572 


2:10 


196, 533 


2:8 


542, 660 


5 


547 


2:11-22 


265, 463, 545 


2:12 


517 


5:10 


533 


2:14 


463 


2:15 


139,312,317, 


5:17 


196, 267,525, 


2:19 


545, 546 




502, 503 




547 


2:19-22 


272, 291, 556 


2:20 


542 


6:10 


100 


2:20 


510 


3:1 


117n,517 


6:16 


546 


2:20-22 


546 


3:5 


340 


6:16-18 


549 


2:22 


448 


3:5-10 


550 


11:2 


33,356 


3:4 


54 


3:5-17 


122 


11:2-3 


109, 474 


3:5 


265 


3:10 


122, 140, 196, 


11:3 


337 


3:6 


265 




343 


11:14 


432 


3:10 


231, 318 


3:25 


533 


13:5 


70 


3:15 

3:22 


32 
291 


4:16 


54, 133 


Galatians 




4:8 


502 


1 Thessalonians 


1:8 


494n 


4:13 


278n, 509 


1:6 


68 


1:18 


362 


4:17-19 


94 


2:14-16 


19, 196, 342 



694 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



1 Thessalonians 


Titus 




Hebrews 




2:14-17 


280 


1:5-9 


151 


9:10 


475n 


2:15-16 


341,449 


1:10-16 


331 


9:11-12 


388 


216 


6, 291 


1:14 


343 


9:23 


141, 154,272 


3:4 


68 


1:16 


343 


9:23-24 


150, 231, 388 


4:13 


541 


3:3-8 


550 


9:24 


272 


4:14-17 


517 


3:6 


398 


9:24-28 


133 


4:16 


146, 312 






10 


647 


4:17 


149, 635 


Hebrews 




10:1 


388, 389 


5:1-11 


410 


1:1-2 


16n 


10:4 


169 


5:2 


542 


1:1-2:5 


545 


1010-14 


133 


5:2-3 


451 


1:2 


51, 117n, 540 


1012-13 


117n 


5:2-9 


571 


1:3 


117n 


10:16 


641 


5:9 


123, 201, 236 


1:5 


117n 


10:19 


249, 272, 382 


5:23-24 


122 


1:13 


117n 


1019-20 


273 


5:27 


54 


2 


510 


1019-25 


291 






2:1-3 


123 


10:19-39 


449 


2 Thessalonians 


2:5 


473 


10:22-24 


572 


1:4-10 


68 


2:10-13 


278n 


10:25 


392 


1:7-9 


260 


2:11-12 


472 


10:26-31 


123, 187,391 


2:1 


372, 392 


2:14 


247, 502 


10:30-39 


291n 


2:3 


123 


2:14-15 


312, 317 


10:34 


100 


2:3-4 


328 


2:16 


153n 


1035-39 


123 


2:6-12 


633 


2:17 


18 


11:10 


545,552 


2:7 


431 


3-4 


281 


11:16 


545 


2:7-12 


409 


3:1-6 


545 


11:17-19 


87 


2:11-12 


123 


3:2-6 


312n 


11:22 


282 


2:13 


123 


3:6 


272 


11:38 


198 






3:12-14 


123 


12 


359n 


1 Timothy 




412 


76, 483 


12:1-5 


137 


1:3-7 


331 


4:12-13 


485 


12:2 


117n 


1:5 


55 


4:16 


291,480 


12:6 


629 


1:17 


387 


5:1-3 


169 


12:9-10 


278n 


1:19-20 


331 


5:5 


117n 


12:15-29 


449 


2:19 


483 


5:6 


117n 


12:22 


128,272,354 


3:1-7 


151 


5:10 


117n 


12:22-23 


147, 332, 


3:15 


130, 272, 545 


5:12 


542 




358-59, 484 


4:1-3 


68, 123,331 


6:4-6 


123 




545, 546 


4:10 


626, 628, 632, 


6:4-8 


449 


12:22-24 


149, 284 




648 


6:5 


473 


12:23 


272 


4:13 


54 


6:13-20 


264 


12:25-29 


413,414 


6:15 


387 


6:19-20 


272 


12:26-27 


197 


6:16 


150, 388, 446 


6:20 


117n 


12:26-28 


197, 285, 543 


6:20-21 


331 


7:3 


117n 


13:10-14 


449 






7:11-14 


212 


13:11-14 


377 


2 Timothy 




7:17 


117n 


13:17 


151 


1:9 


123 


7:21 


117n 






2:10 


123 


7:22-28 


133 


James 




2:12 


104 


7:22-8:6 


18 


1:1 


152, 357 


2:16-18 


331 


7:23 


169 


1:17 


623, 625, 630 


2:19 


205 


7:27 


169 


1:18 


357 


3:1-9 


123,331 


8 


647 


2:2 


272 


3:1-12 


68 


8:1 


117n 


2:17-20 


533 


3:12 


220 


8:1-2 


150 


2:19 


527, 658 


3:13 
3:16 


331 

41, 581 


8:1-6 

8:2 

8:5 


291 
388 
32,58,141, 150, 


4:2 
4:7 


250 
502n 


3:17 


41, 581 




154, 231, 272, 


5:1-6 


18, 258 


4:1 


530 




388,389 


5:1-9 


16n 


4:3^ 


123 


8:10-11 


640-41 


5:3 


540 


4:6 


194 


8:13 


16n, 540 


5:4 


300n 


4:10 


331 


9:1 


475n 


5:7-9 


366 


4:14 


195 


94 


87.109 


5:14-15 


151, 191 


4:14-16 


331 


9:8 


292 


5:17 


88, 274, 277 



695 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



/ Peter 




iJohn 




Revelation 




1:1-2 


123 


3:18 


312 


1 


10-11 


50 


1:7 


136 


4:4 


503 


1 


10-13 


213 


1:18-19 


549 


4:14 


575 


1 


11 


171, 565 


25 


272 


4:19 


I62n 


1 


11-15 


71-75 


2:6 


354 


5:2-3 


96 


1 


12 


58n 


2:6-8 


435n 


5:3 


323 


1 


12-20 


168 


2:8 


435, 435n 


5:4 


99,549 


1 


13 


50, 276, 389 


28-9 


123 


5:7 


45n 


1 


13-16 


72, 343 


2:9 


435,443, 510, 


5:16-17 


630 


1 


14 


154n,483 




518 


5:20-21 


9 


1 


14-15 


50,90 


2:9-10 


320 






1 


14-16 


259 


220 


16n, 540 


Jude 




1 


15 


424 


224 


99n, 567 


J 


366, 474 


1 


16 


50, 74, 15-76, 


2:25 


127,486,529 


4 


123, 334 




81, 90, 119, 


3:19 


367 


6 


244,251,306, 




184, 260, 297, 


3:20-21 


347, 544 




503 




408,485 


4:6 


367 


9 


312 


1 


17 


81, 565 


4:12-13 


221 


13 


81 


1 


17-18 


50, 76-78, 90 


4:12-19 


103 


17-19 


540 


1 


18 


191,499,534 


4:17 


362 


24 


122, 129,474 


1 


19 


78-80 


5:12-13 


363 






1 


20 


56n, 58n, 72, 


5:13 


362-63 


Revelation 
l 


17,46,51-83, 




78, 90, 119, 

276, 306 


2 Peter 






90, 565, 595, 


2 


85-118 


1:4 


278n 




597 


2-3 


17, 46, 55, 81, 


1:10 


70 


1-3 


231,610 




89, 158, 168, 


1:16-19 


260 


1-5 


597 




230 


1:19 


205,572 


1-11 


45, 295 


2:1 


86, 90, 93-94 


1:21 


70 


1:1 


1, 3,42, 51-53, 


2:1-7 


46, 85-86, 89, 


2:1-3 


123 




56, 79, 154, 




93-99 


2:4 


244, 251, 306, 




291, 297, 469, 


2:2 


69,550 




503 




507, 565, 569 


2:2-3 


94-95, lot 


2:5 


347 


1:1-2 


49 


2:2-4 


86 


2:7-8 


334 


1:1-3 


51 


2:3 


69 


2:20-22 


123 


1:2 


389,514,565 


2:4-6 


95-98 


3:1-14 


540-44, 570 


1:2-3 


54-55 


2:5 


86, %, 109, 121 


3:2-3 


542 


1:3 


22, 27, 42, 50, 




410, 575 


3:2-4 


540 




54, 56, 139, 


2:6 


107 


3:3-5 


542 




154, 167,239, 


2:6-7 


86 


3:5-7 


540 




518,565,575 


2:7 


85, 109, 187, 


3:7 


540 


1:4 


1, 41, 58n, 86, 




488, 568, 578 


3:7-14 


197 




106, 119,276, 


2:8 


90, 100-1 


3:8 


41 




434, 565, 574 


2:8-11 


46, 86-87, 89, 


3:9-10 


505 


1:4-5 


154, 167 




99-104 


3:10 


542 


1:4-6 


55-63 


2:9 


127, 136, 256, 


3:11 


543 


1:5 


43, 105, 154, 




332, 499, 578 


3:12 


542, 543 




264, 387, 519, 


29-lo 


101-4 


3:13 


540, 543, 544 




565, 574 


2:10 


151.187n, 499, 


3:14 


543 


1:5-6 


50,68 




509 


3:17 


123 


1:6 


89, 104, 151, 
168, 216,273, 


2:11 


85, 104, 187, 
488, 518, 629 


/ John 






509,518,570 


2:12 


90, 105-6 


1:1-3 


575 


1:7 


50, %, 109, 121, 


2:12-17 


46, 87, 90, 


2:3-4 


70, 323 




168, 565, 575 




104-11 


2:3-6 


577-78 


1:7-8 


64-67 


2:13 


106-7, 499, 514 


2:11 


136 


1:8 


387, 409, 548, 




550 


2:18 


16n, 457, 540 




565 


2:14 


97n, 98, 258, 


2:19 


122 


1:9 


1, 50, 67-70, 80, 




356, 550 


2:20 


149 




221, 389, 514, 


2:14-15 


98 


2:27 


149 




565 


2:16 


76, 96, 121, 410, 


3:2 


131, 278n 


1:9-20 


45 




485, 575 


3:8 


500 


1:10 


70-71, 146, 148, 


2:17 


85, 109-11, 187, 


3:11-12 


194, 282 




168, 552 






217, 483, 488 



696 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Revelation 




Revelation 




Revelation 




2:18 


90, 112 


3:20 


24, 153, 482 


5:11 


152, 507, 510n 


2:18-29 


46, 87-88, 90, 


3:20-21 


579 


5:11-14 


178, 179-80 




111-18 


3:21 


85, 151, 187, 


5:14 


152, 510n,611 


2:19 


69,550 




488, 321 


6 


143, 181-99, 610 


2:19-20 


112-14 


3:21-22 


139 


6:1 


481, 521n, S79 


2:20 


97n, 258, 439, 


4 


21, 145-64, 168, 


6:1-2 


182, 185-88 




499, 550 




594, 596, 597, 


6:1-8 


21,46, 183, 213 


220-22 


356, 550 




610 


6:2 


184, 185, 187, 


2:20-23 


431 


4-7 


17, 20, 46, 89, 




529 


2:20-24 


471 




158 


6:3 


579 


2:21 


258 


4:1 


146-49, 284, 


6:3-4 


182, 188-89 


2:21-23 


114-15 




326, 507, 611 


6:4 


185 


2:23 


533, 577 


4:1-11 


46, 145-64 


6:4-5 


185 


2:24 


499 


4:2 


148, 552 


6:5 


579 


2:24-25 


115-16 


4:2-3 


149-51, 529, 554 


6:5-6 


182, 189-91 


2:25 


410 


4:3 


186,260,557 


6:7 


579 


2:26 


187 


4:3-4 


429 


6:7-8 


182, 191-92 


2:26-27 


117n, 151, 514, 


4:4 


122, 151-54, 


6:8 


184, 185,534 




518,579 




152, 177, 


6:9 


41,62, 389, 512, 


2:26-28 


488 




187n, 350, 




598 


2:26-29 


85, 116-18 




475, 508, 509, 


6:9-10 


193-95, 273 


2:27 


In 




510n,518 


6:9-11 


21, 46, 182, 


2:28 


579 


4:4-6 


611 




197n, 239, 


3 


119-39 


4:4-11 


3 1 8, 472 




402, 469 


3:1 


90,119-20,343 


4:5 


58n, 78, 91, 


6:9-17 


192-93 


3:1-6 


46, 88, 119-25 




184,276,574 


6:10 


129, 185n, 201, 


3:2 


410 


4:5-8 


154-60, 204n 




300n 


3:2-3 


120-21 


4:6 


156,384,392 


6.11 


122, 185, 195-% 


3:3 


96, 410, 542 


4:6-8 


429 


6:12 


285, 413 


3:4 


in 


4:7 


156, 241, 301n, 


6:12-13 


184 


3:4-5 


195, 410 




389 


6:12-14 


196-97 


3:5 


85, 187, 339, 


4:8 


221, 366, 61 I 


6:12-17 


21, 46, 182, 




488, 533 


4:9-11 


160-64 




347n 


3:6 


122 


4:10 


152, 187n, 339, 


6:14 


184,541 


3:7 


90, 126-27 




510n,611 


6:15 


185 


3:7-13 


46, 88, 12S-32 


5 


21, 143, 165-80, 


6:15-17 


197-99 


3:8-9 


127-28 




594, 597, 605, 


6:16 


246, 417 


3:9 


151.256.332. 




610 


7 


21, 30, 143, 




419, 499, 5s0, 


5:1 


529 




201-24, 218, 




578 


5:1-4 


166-69, 18: 




381,559, 610 


3:10 


69, 109, 129, 


5:1-5 


46 


7:1 


183,197 




219, 361, 405, 


5:2 


460 


7:1-3 


203-6 




428 


5:5 


152, 187, 262n, 


7:1-8 


46, 201, 202-12. 


3:10-11 


128-30 




504, 510n,578 




273 


3:11 


96, 151, 187n, 


5:5-6 


72, 147, 213 


7:2 


1 85, 300n 




282, 410, 509, 


5:5-7 


169-74 


7:2-4 


342 




575 


5:6 


In, 58n, 78, 


7:2-8 


355 


3:12 


85, 187, 272, 




152, 155, 183, 


7:3 


181, 191,236, 




342, 355, 389, 




354, 510n, 




355, 430, 570 




430, 488, 545, 




598, 611 


7:4-8 


206-13, 246, 




546, 561, 570, 


5:6-11 


359-60 




296, 355, 507 




578,599 


5:6-14 


46 


7:5 


559 


3:12-13 


130-32 


5:7 


152, 510n,529 


7:5-8 


555 


3:14 


91, 132-33, 264, 


5:8 


78, 230, 231, 


7:9 


122, 213-18, 




475, 481, 482, 




273, 339, 390, 




270, 339, 475, 




574, 5°0 




518, 550, 611 




611 


3:14-22 


46, 56, 88-89, 


5:8-10 


174-79 


7:9-17 


46, 201, 212-24, 




132-39, 482 


5:8-14 


318 




318 


3:15-16 


134-35 


5:9 


151,153n, 356, 


7:10 


218-19, 300n, 


3:16 


322n 




401, 605 




611 


3:17 


482 


5:9-10 


64 


7:11 


152, 339, 510n 


3:18 


122,410,482 


5:10 


273, 509, 514, 


7:11-12 


219 


3:19-20 


136-39 




518 


7:13 


122, 152, 510n 



697 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Revelation 




Revelation 




Revelation 




7:13-14 


78, 219-21 


9:16 


11, 507 


11:16 


152, 339,468, 


7:14 


41,475 


9:17-19 


12, 2sl-53, 408 




508, 510n 


7:15 


318, 339, 389, 


9:18 


306n 


11:16-17 


290 




514, 561,599, 


9:19 


499 


11:16-18 


290-91 




611 


9:20 


234, 339, 550 


11:17 


468 


7:15-17 


M4, 221-24, 


9:20-21 


253-57 


11:18 


117n, 468, 518, 




403, 546 


9:21 


258, 550 




550, 569 


7:16 


203 


10 


227, 259-70 


11:19 


234, 291-93, 


8 


21,227,229-42, 


10:1 


259-61, 281, 




2%, 389, 413, 




610 




297, 343, 371, 




443, 468, 599 


8-9 


81 




460.499 


12 


38, 147, 290, 


8-11 


146n, 23 1,395 


10:1-7 


21, 4s, 46, 259 




295-324, 316, 


8-14 


17, 20, 46, 89, 


10:1-11:13 


601 




395,428 




158, 225-27, 


10:1-11:14 


20 1 


12-13 


106,601, 610 




295 


10:2 


266 


12-14 


383 


8:1 


181, 598 


102-3 


261-62 


12-22 


45, 295 


8:1-2 


169, 229-31, 332 


103 


300n 


12:1 


187n, 343, 383, 


8:1-5 


46, 229 


104 


262-64, 576 




5s3, 554 


8:1-11:18 


599 


105 


266 


121-2 


45, 297-303 


8:2 


185, 337, 339, 


10:5-7 


264-68 


12:1-6 


46, 2%-97 




343 


106-7 


286, 395 


12:3 


280, 296, 303-6, 


8:3 


185.229 


107 


6, 267, 270, 291, 




327, 328, 383, 


8:3-4 


273; 518, 550 




431,569 




428, 433 


8:3-5 


231-35, 239, 


108-10 


268-69 


12:3-4 


499 




374, 390, 600 


108-11 


21, 46, 268 


12:4 


81, 245, 306-8, 


8:4 


229 


1011 


27, 269.70, 507 




314, 322n 


8:5 


413 


11 


271-93, 536,610 


12:5 


117n, 298, 


8:6-7 


235-37 


11-13 


283 




308-9311 


8:6-12 


281 


11:1-2 


21,272-75, 389, 


126 


216, 274, 


8:6-13 


46 




556 




309-10, 311, 


8:6-9:21 


601 


11:1-14 


46, 271-72 




319, 321, 428, 


8:7 


191n,396 


11:2 


310, 333, 562 




507 


8;7-12 


192, 306 


11:2-3 


310, 333 


12:7 


437,499 


8:8 


197n 


11:3 


507 


12:7-9 


73n, 3111-15 


8:8-9 


238-39, 396, 398 


11:3-4 


276-77 


12:7-12 


46,310,311 


8:10-11 


239-40, 396, 400 


11:4 


78, 339 


12:9 


106, 245, 303, 


8:10-12 


81 


11:4-12 


54 




306, 337, 357, 


8:12 


240-41, 396, 402 


11:5 


339,408, 507, 




499 


8:13 


129, 169, 




526 


12:9-11 


296,514 




24142, 286, 


11:5-6 


277-78 


12:9-27 


45 




318, 361,413, 


11:7 


244, 278-80, 


1210 


314, 337, 518 




489 




325, 332, 362, 


12:10-11 


315-17 


9 


30, 243-57,610 




429, 433 


12:11 


26, 41, 62, 99, 


9:1 


81, 244,499 


11:7-11 


290 




323, 331, 389, 


9:1-3 


326 


11:8 


21, 296, 363, 




502n 


9:1-6 


24446, 280n 




395,414,442 


1212 


169, 216, 245, 


9:1-11 


447 


11:8-10 


281-83 




286, 317-18, 


9:1-12 


46, 243, 286, 


11:10 


129,611 




323, 358, 484, 




3% 


11:11 


344 




499, 514 


9:2 


244, 251 


11:11-12 


2s3-84 


12:13 


319,499 


9:3-11 


306n 


11:12-14 


290 


1213-17 


319 


9:4 


191n, 236 


11:13 


234,413, 507 


12:14 


227, 242., 274, 


9:5 


469 


11:13-14 


284-86 




309, 319-21, 


9:7-12 


246-47 


11:14 


%, 318 




428 


9:11 


98, 244, 433, 


11:14-15 


169, 242 


12:14-15 


499 




434 


11:14-19 


601 


12:15-16 


321-22, 408 


9:12 


169, 242, 286 


11:15 


227, 234, 265, 


12:16-17 


322n, 499 


9:13 


248-50, 391, 407 




286-90, 301, 


12:17 


323-24, 389, 514 


9:13-21 


46, 248, 286, 




303, 318, 468, 


13 


30, 318,325-52, 




347n, 3%, 




514 




351n,395 




4Q7 


11:15-16 


518 


13:1 


262, 329, 332, 


9:14-16 


250-51 


11:15-19 


46, 242, 268, 




404,428, 429, 


9:15 


306 




286, 3%, 468 




438 



698 



SCRIPTURE INDEX 



Revelation 




Revelation 




Revelation 




13:1-2 


318, 326-29 


14:7 


372, 387 


16:12-16 


396 


13:1-8 


344n 


14:8 


258, 362-64, 


16:13 


336, 499, 550 


13:1-10 


46, 326 




365,414,415, 


16:13-14 


408-9 


13:2 


106, 329, 499 




423, 431, 446, 


16:14 


78, 297n 


13:3-4 


329-32, 432 




448, 550 


16:15 


27,54,518, 5'75 


13:4 


329, 458, 499, 


14:8-9 


385 


16:15-17 


77 




550 


14:8-10 


356 


16.-16 


411-12 


13:5 


216, 274, 310 


149-11 


364-66 


16:17 


412-13,472,548 


13:5-6 


328, 408 


1410 


339, 363, 389, 


16:17-21 


3%, 422, 546 


13:6 


318,358,484, 




390 


16:18 


412, 413-14 




514 


14:10-11 


529 


16:19 


363, 390, 395, 


13:7 


518,550 


14:11 


472 




414-16, 423, 


13:8 


129, 331, 


14:12 


69, 518, 550 




442 




333-34,361, 


14:12-13 


366-70 


16:20 


417 




435, 533, 534 


14:13 


54, 372, 518 


16:21 


237,412,417-19 


13:9-10 


334-35 


1414 


187, 361, 481 


17 


421-43 


13:10 


69, 366, 507, 


1414-16 


371-73 


17-18 


21, 381, 610 




518,550 


14:14-20 


46, 370-71 


17-22 


418 


13:11 


262, 336-37, 


14:15 


300n, 371, 389 


17:1 


20, 363, 381, 




408,499 


14:15-19 


375 




418, 422, 429, 


13:11-17 


364, 422 


14:17 


285, 389 




552 


13:11-18 


46, 335-36 


1417-18 


373-75 


17:1-2 


421, 423-28 


13:12 


129, 330, 331, 


1417-20 


371 


17:1-5 


47 




361 


14:19-20 


169, 375-77, 487 


17:1-7 


423 


13:12-15 


550 


14:20 


484, 507 


17:2 


129,258,361, 


13:13 


297n 


15 


381, 383-93, 




431,437,448, 


13:13-14 


338-41 




395, 610 




550 


13:14 


129, 297n, 315, 


15-16 


231, 2% 


17:3 


428-29, 433, 




330, 331, 337, 


15-22 


17, 20, 46, 89, 




446, 552, 608 




361,499 




158,381,552 


17:4 


258, 429-30, 


13:15 


344, 550 


15:1 


297n, 383-84, 




448, 456n 


13:15-17 


341-44 




387, 397, 412, 


17:4-5 


550 


13:15-18 


364 




599 


17:5 


20, 114, 327, 


13:16 


100 


15:1-4 


46,383 




430-31, 439 


13:16-17 


355,431 


15:2 


384-86,491, 514 


17:6 


402, 518, 550 


13:16-14.1 


347 


15:2ff 


217 


17:6-7 


431-32 


13:17 


100 


15:3 


382,386-87, 563 


17:6-8 


47 


13:18 


35,41,43, 79, 


15:3-4 


385, 402 


17:8 


129, 244,334, 




276n, 309, 


15:4 


285, 339, 




361, 433-35, 




344-52 




387-88, 475n 




533,534 


14 


21,30, 227, 231, 


15:5 


388-89, 443 


17:8-18 


432-33 




353-77, 359n, 


15:5-8 


46, 385, 388, 


17:9 


78, 429 




384, 395, 601, 




397, 546 


17:9-10 


435-36 




610 


15:6 


475 


17:9-11 


327 


14:1 


296, 342, 


15:6-7 


389-92 


17:10 


43, 78, 507 




354-55, 430, 


15:8 


392-93 


17:11 


436-37 




507, 552, 570, 


16 


81, 375, 381, 


17:12 


78, 327, 437 




598, 602 




395-419, 610 


17:13-14 


437-38 


14:1-5 


46, 353-54, 


16:1 


397-98, 546 


17:14 


280n, 484 


14:2 

14:2-3 

14:3 


359-60 
424 
355-56 
339, 507, 510n, 


16:1-9 
16:1-21 
16:2 
16:2-12 


46, 396-97 
169 

396,398,405 
281 


17:15 
17:16 


78, 424, 438-39, 
458, 484, 570 
114, 439-41, 

446, 448 
270, 381n,437 
334,441-42,492 
43,421,442-43 
21,445-66,608 
445-46, 499 


14:4 

14:4-5 

14:5 

14:6 


598, 605 
78, 214, 372, 

601 
356-60 
339, 601 
129, 242, 372, 


16:3 

16:4-7 

16:6 

16:7 

16:8-9 

16:9 


396, 398-400 

396.40402 

291; 390, 518 

387 

392, 402-4 

203, 285 


17:16-17 

17:17 

17:18 

18 

18:1 




489, 550 


16:10 


106 


18:1-2 


460 


14:6-7 


360-62 


16:10-11 


3%, 405-7 


18:1-8 


47, 445 


14:6-13 


46, 360 


16:10-21 


46, 404-5 


18:2 


246, 300n, 


14:6-20 


371 


16:12 


407-8 




446-48, 472 



699 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Revelation 




Revelation 




Revelation 




18:3 


258, 448, 458, 


19:12-13 


Inn 


21:5 


574 




550 


1912-16 


483-84 


21:6 


413, 547, 548-49 


18:4-5 


448-49 


19:13 


In, 481, 484 


21:7 


549 


18:5 


608 


19:14 


122, 484 


21:8 


251, 258, 550, 


186 


19 


19:15 


117n, 408, 




578 


18:6-8 


449-51 




485-88,526 


21:9 


381,418,422, 


18:7 


89, 429, 482 


19:15-16 


Inn 




546, 552, 556, 


18:9 


258,472 


19:16 


387, 488-89 




566, 596 


18:9-10 


452-54 


19:17 


300n, 481, 499, 


21:9-10 


545 


18:9-20 


47, 452 




609 


21:9-11 


33 


38:10 


286 


19:17-18 


47,242,489-91 


21:9-27 


47, 550-51 


18:11 


608 


19:17-21 


270, 381n 


21:9-22:5 


83, 343, 525 


18:ll-17a 


448, 454-57 


19:19 


117,481,499 


21:10 


28, 431.518, 


18:13 


865 


19:19-21 


47, 491-92 




6 1 1 


18:16 


286, 430 


19:20 


251, 297n, 336, 


21:10-11 


552-54 


18:17b-19 


457-58 




408, 499, 529. 


21:11 


557, 569 


18:18-19 


300n 




550 


21:12 


209, 382 


18:19 


286 


1921 


408, 526 


21:12-14 


152, 212, 554-56 


18:20 


458-59, 469, 


20 


493-534, 536, 


21:12-27 


214 




518,550 




610 


21:15-16 


273 


18:20-24 


47 


20:1 


242, 481, 499 


21:15-17 


556-57 


18:21 


460-63 


201-3 


47, 78n, 244, 


21:17 


231 


18:21-23 


463n 




499 


21:18-21 


429, 557-60 


18:21-24 


459-60 


20:2 


106 


21:22 


469, 611 


18:22-23 


463-65 


202-3 


499-508 


21:22-23 


560-61, 569 


18:23 


258, 460, 499, 


203 


242, 519,647 


21:22-25 


570 




550 


20:3ff 


501 


21:22-27 


242 


18:24 


291,402, 


204 


149,389,481, 


21:23 


611 




465-66,518, 




499, 508-15 


21:24 


285, 611 




550, 569 


20:4-6 


21, 104, 129, 


21:24-26 


555, 578 


18:24-19:2 


468 




216,490, 508, 


21:24-27 


543,561-63,569 


19 


21, 188,467-92, 




573 


21:25 


611 




608, 610 


20:4-10 


47 


21:27 


446, 550, 578 


19:1 


468 


20:5 


532 


22 


21, 30, 565-80 


19:1-2 


469-72 


20:5-6 


515-19 


221 


19 


19:1-8 


480 


20:6 


54, 104n, 570, 


221-2 


552, 566-69 


19:1-10 


47, 382, 467-68, 




629 


22:1-5 


47, 56S-66 




609 


20:7 


507 


22:3-4 


569-70 


19:2 


114,258,291, 


20:7-8 


519-24 


22:4 


131,382,576, 




382, 550, 569 


20:7-9 


21 




611 


19:3 


472, 482 


20:7-10 


519 


22:5 


570-73, 579 


194 


152,468,472, 


20:7-15 


647 


22:6 


42, 52, 507, 565, 




510n 


20:8 


504, 521n 




569 


19:5 


382, 468, 470, 


209 


518, 545 


22:6-7 


55, 574-75 




472-73, 569 


209-10 


524-29 


22:6-21 


47, 565, 573-74 


19:6 


39,468 


2010 


550 


22:7 


7, 27, 54, %, 


19:6-8 


343, 473-75 


2011 


154n,481, 499, 




518,565 


19:7 


285,470 




529-32, 537, 546 


228 


72.565 


19:7-9 


33,545 


20:11-15 


47.529 


228-9 


478.575-76 


19:8 


136.457.482. 


20:12 


532-33 


22:9 


569' 




5i 8, 5s0 


20:12-13 


577 


22:10 


27, 43, 55, 263, 


19:9 


54, 473,475-78, 


20:13 


533-34 




576 




482, 518, 574, 


20:14 


518, 629 


22:11 


577 




609 


20:14-15 


534 


22:12 


%, 533, 565 


19:9-13 


482 


21 


21,535-63,547 


22:12-13 


577 


19:10 


27,291,382, 


21-22 


536, 610 


22:13 


565 




389, 432, 


21:1 


297n, 481.499. 


22:14 


27, 54, 518, 568, 




478-80.514. 




525,532. 




575, 577-78 




5 7 4, 5 ? 5 




537-45, 546 


22:15 


258,439,550,578 


19:11 


147, 154n, 


21:1-8 


47,537 


22:16 


565, 573, 578-79 




481-83, 499, 


21:2 


1,431, 518, 


22:17 


In, 579 




529, 574, 609 




545-46, 557 


22:18 


565 


19:11-13 


187 


21:2-3 


469 


22:18-19 


27, 129, 580 


19:11-16 


47, 7'6, 186, 312 


21:3 


297n, 443, 


22:19 


45 


19:11-2] 


480-81 




546-47, 569, 


22:20 


96, 192, 565 


19:11-22:5 


382 




596,609,611 


22:20-21 


580 


19:12 


483-84, 488 


21:4-5 


547-48 


22:21 


578 



700 



AUTHOR INDEX 



Adams, Jay, 495n 

Alexander, Ralph H., 18, 19 

AJford, Henry, 340 

Allen, Richard Hinckley, 158n, 307n 

Allis, Oswald T., 60, 146n 

Ambrose, 580 

Andreas, 351 

Archer, Gleason, 18n 

Arndt, William R, 150n, 47% 

Athanasius, 5n, 278n, 367, 4%, 503n 

Augustine, 159, 236, 237n, 403, 404n, 442, 

496n, 503n, 504n, 526 
Aurelius, Marcus, 655 

Bahnsen, Greg, 106n,314n, 496n, 653-54 

Barnes, Arthur Stapylton, 3n 

Barnouin,M., 15% 

Barr, James, 265n 

Bavinck, Herman, 31-32, 75n, 312n 

Beasley-Murray, G. R., 53, 120, 166n,251 

Beatus, 351 

Beckwith.Isbon T., 315, 436n 

Bengel, J. A., 393 

Berkhof.L., 146n, 530 

Berman, Harold J., 618 

Boettner,Loraine, 57n, 495n 

Bossuet, 480 

Bouyer, Louis, 41n, 138, 494n, 620 

Bray, Gerald, 58n 

Brinsmead, Robert D., 281n 

Bronfenbrenner, Martin, 657n 

Brookes, Warren T., 498n 

Brown, David, 495n 

Brown, John, 435n 

Brown, Peter, 496 

Bruce, F. F., 265n 

Bruggen, Jakob van, 44 

Bullinger, E. W., 550n 

Bushman, Richard L., 649n 

Butler, Joseph, 27n, 28n 

Caird,G. B., 121n, 198n, 234, 235n, 250n, 

486n, 488n, 523, 558n 
Calvin, John, 103n, 148, 156, 158n, 189, 312n, 

317, 427n, 477n, 496n, 623 



Campbell, Roderick, 60n, 146n 

Carmichael, Calum M., 426n 

Barrington, Philip, 21, 35, 5%, 79n, 
172n, 298, 299n, 312, 313, 356n, 358, 
364n,375, 377n, 391, 408, 410, 412n, 
415, 416n,593 

Cassius, Die, 436n 

Cayce, Edgar, 11 

Cermthus, 494n 

Chadboume, Robert L., llOn 

Charm-y, Walter, 69n 

Charles, R. H., 181-82, 247n, 558, 599 

Cheeseman, John 123n 

Chrysostom, John 340, 549 

Ciardi, John, 34n 

Clark, Gordon H., 171n 

Clement, In, 4n 

Cochrane, Charles Norris, 496n 

Cohn, Norman, 495n 

Commodian, 351 

Cornfeld, Gaalya, 253 

Corsini, Eugenio, 431 

Coxe, A. Cleveland, 33hr 

Cyprian, 474, 475n 

Darby, 615, 616 

Davis, W. Hersey, 344 

DeBoer, Louis F., 614n 

Dechend, Hertha von, 464n, 503n 

De Jong, J. A., 496n 

Dix, Dom Gregory, 24, 25n, 153n 

Dixon, Jeane, 1 1 

Donne, John, 367 

Dooyeweerd, Herman 652, 653 

Douglas, Mary, 430n 

Dykes, Charles, 648 

Edersheim, Alfred, 2, 152n, 220n, 230, 254n, 

332n, 387n, 455, 456n 
Edwards, Jonathan, 648-49, 664 
Efron, Edith, 49 8n 
Eliade, Mircea, 355n 
Eliot, T. S., 134n 
Estrada, David, 5n 
Eusebius, 2n, 3n, 321n, 368, 494n 



701 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Fair' bairn, Patrick, 461-62 

Farrar, F. W., 241n, 349, 350n,351n, 405, 

406n,419n, 437n 
Farrer, Austin, 1, 22, 34, 191, 208-9, 212, 214, 

301n, 306, 322n, 341n, 347n, 349n, 383, 

385n, 386n, 390, 397n, 41 1, 412, 413n, 480n, 

482, 523, 524n, 529, 530n, 554n, 558, 559n, 

561n, 562n, 576n, 577n 
Farstad, Arthur L., 44, 45n, 580n 
Feuerbach, Ludwig, 477 
Fiorenza, Elizabeth Schussler, 94n 
Ford, J. Massyngberde,191n, 197n, 235, 252n, 

297n, 365, 402n, 416n, 430, 434, 448, 454, 

485n, 550n, 555n 
Foster, H., 427n 
Frame, John, 44 In 
Frend, W. H. C, 7n, 153n 
Friedrich, Otto, 495n 
Frye, Northrop, 34n 
Fuller, David Otis, 45n 

Geisler, Norman, 69n 

Germanus, 72, 148 

Gibbon, Edward, 655n 

Gingrich, F. Wilbur, 150n, 479n 

Gish, Duane T., 304n 

Glasson, T. F., 558 

Goldsworthy, Graeme, 495n 

German, Michael J., 550n 

Goulder, M. D., 21, 22n, 23, 143n, 184n, 289, 

565n 
Grant, Michael, 440n 
Green, E. M.B., 134n 
Grier, W. J., 495n 
Griffin, Miriam T., 329 

Harmer, J. R., 95n 

Harnack, Adolf, 221 

Harris, R. Laird, 18n 

Hemer, C. J., 7n, 97n, 134n 

Hendriksen, William, in 

Hengstenberg, E. W., 312n, 387n, 393, 469, 

470n, 480n, 532, 579n 
Henry, Matthew, 94 
Herodotus, 407n, 503n 
Heuvelmans, Bernard, 304n 
Hills, Edward F., 45n 
Hedge, Charles, 340 
Hodges, Zane C., 44, 45n, 185n, 580n 
Hoeksema, Herman, 624 
Hopko, Thomas, 24 
Hughes, Philip Edgcumbe, 51 7n 

Ignatius, 95, 368 

Irenaeus, 3, 97, 187n, 293n, 333n, 346n, 351, 
494n, 503, 504n, 568n 



Jaki, Stanley, 648n 

Jenkins, Ferrell, 20n, 25-26 

Jesus Ben Sirach, 74 

Jones, Cheslyn, 138n 

Jordan, James B., 18, 23n, 33n, 36, 37, 39n, 
82n, 106n,114n,138n, 157, 198n,203n,206n, 
232n, 245n, 273, 279, 331n, 334, 347n, 422n, 
450n, 464n, 478, 496n, 498n, 5 1 1 , 5 1 2, 
516, 531n,612, 619n 

Josephus, Flavius,107n,189n, 190, 225, 237n, 
245, 246, 247n,252n, 253-54, 255, 256, 
301n, 376n, 399, 400n, 402n, 406n, 408n, 
416n,417, 430n,436n, 443n, 448, 451n, 
454-55, 456n,552n, 553, 558 

Jungmann, Josef A., 138n 

Justin Martyr, 476, 494n, 655 

Kahn, Herman, 499n 

Kaiser, Wafter C., Jr., 170tl 

Kallas, James, 79 

Kik.Marcellus, 202, 287, 496n 

King, Max R., 254n, 531n 

Kline, Meredith G., 13-14, 39n, 50n,60n, 65n, 
70n, 7 In, 74n, 78n, 85n, llln,130n, 141, 
142n, 143, 144n, 148, 167, 173n,175, 222n, 
225n, 227, 260n, 262, 265n, 266n, 267n, 
270n, 281n, 320n, 338n, 379n, 380, 483n, 
570n, 639, 653-54, 658 

Koestler, Arthur, 613n, 650n 

Kuiper, R. B., 123n 

Kuyper, Abraham, 448n 

Lecerf, Auguste, 400n 

Legge, Francis, 9 

Leithart, Peter J., 490 

Lenski, R. C. H., 337n, 345 

Lewis, Arthur H., 495 

Lewis, C. S., 527, 554, 658 

Lightfoot,J. B., 82n, 95n, 369n 

Lilienthal, Alfred M., 613 

Lindsey, Hal, 11, 12, 129, 146n,172n, 186, 

521n, 616 
London, Herbert I., 498n 
Luther, Martin, 100, 344n, 492 

MacDonaJd, James M., 4n 

MacGregor, Geddes, 138n 

McGuiggan, Jim, 531n 

Machen, J. Gresham,123 

McKelvey, R. J., 272 

McKnight, William J., 97n 

Mantzaridis, Georgios I., 278n 

Martin, Ernest L., 5n, 99n, 159n, 254n, 255n, 

288, 289n, 300n, 301, 302-3, 346n, 552, 

553n, 568n 
Martin, J. L., 12,13n 
Mather, Cotton, 655 



702 



AUTHOR INDEX 



Maurice, Charles, 498n 
Merton, Robert K., 648n 
Minear, Paul, 147n 
Moore, Thomas V., 270n 

Moms, Henry M., mn,297n, 399n, 52ln 

Morris, Leon, 25n, 26, 534 

Mounce, Robert H., I05n, 106,120, 134, ]90n, 

251 
Murray, Iain,216n,269n, 496n, 511 
Murray, John, 123, 124n,269ll, 340, 533, 538, 

649n, 650n,66!n 
Myers, Thomas, 427n 

Nisbet, Robert, 4%n 

North, Gary, 204, 465n, 498n,506n,510n, 

515n, 526-28, 577n, 620n, 623, 626n, 635, 

656n, 657n 

Nostradamus, 1 1 

Owen, John, 101, 413, 414n, 540-41,542-43, 

544 

Palmer, B, M., ]62n 

Paquier, Richard, 138n, 153, 154n 

Perrine, Laurence, 34n 

Pfeiffer, Charles F., 136n 

Philo,558 

Pickering, Wilbur N., 44 

Pink, Arthur, 53, 123n 

Pipes, Richard, 521n 

Plato, 655 

Plumraer, A., 133n 

Plumptre, E. H.,205n 

Plutarch, 503n 

Poythress, Vern S., 39n, 662n 

Pratt, Richard L., Jr., 39n 

Reed, Luther D., 138n 

Revel, Jean-Francois, 520n 

Ridderbos, Herman, 500, 502n 

Robertson, A. J.,344n 

Robinson, James M., 94rr 

Robinson, John A. T., 1, 3n,4n, 185n 

Rudwick, M. J. S., 134n 

Rushdoony, RousasJohn, 6n, 8,9n, 33n, 58n, 

59n, 61-62, 106n,115,Jl6n, 139, 171,194n, 

204n, 208, 217, 263, 268, 355n, 386, 495n, 

558n,578n, 580, 639, 640n 
Russell, J. Stuart, 41, 42n, 359, 363n, 395-96n, 

418, 436n, 439, 440n,531 
Rutherford, Samuel, 103 
Ryken, Leland, 37n 

Sanders, Ronald, 612n 
Santillana, Giorgio de, 464n, 503n 
Schaeifer, Francis, 8, 425n 
Scnaff, Philip, 547, 548n 



Schlossberg, Herbert, 256, 257n, 269n, 284, 

339 
Schmemarm, Alexander, 6hr, 138n, 332, 333n, 

369, 477 
Schneider, Johannes, 568n 
Schweitzer, Albert, 630 
Scofield, C. I., 55-56, 615 
Seiss, Joseph A., 159n 
Severus, Sulpitius, 351n, 440 
Shafarevich, lgor,495n 

Shedd, W. G. T., 497 

Shepherd, Massey H., Jr., 23, 138n 

Shepherd, Norman, 518, 544 

Simon, Julian L., 499n 

Simon, Merrill, 616, 619 

Smithson, Charles W., 498n 

Spencer, Duane Edward, 516 

Stauffer.Ethelbert, 7n, 218n, 656n 

Stonehouse, Ned B., 151, 177-78 

Stuart, Moses, 4n, 179n, 328n, 364, 436n, 

575n 
Sturz, Harry A., 44 
Suetonius, 329n, 436n 
Sutton, Antony, 520n 

Sutton, Ray R., 14, 15n, 85, 142n,225n, 379n 
Sweet, J. P. M„ 20n, 398n, 410n, 550n, 555n, 

558 
Swete, Henry Barclay, 4, 7n, 9n, 108n, 261, 

338n, 384n, 486n, 507, 508n 
Symington, William, 63n, 488n, 563 

Tacitus, Cornelius, 4n, 255n, 329n, 405n, 406, 

407n,436n, 439 

Taylor, E. L. Hebden, 640n, 648n 

Telford, William, 239n 

Temple, William, 57n 

Tenney, Merrill C, 29-30 

Terry, Milton S., 184, 206n, 207, 229, 230n, 
295, 313n,322, 323n, 325n,328n, 344n, 
353n, 357n, 358, 363, 433, 434n, 437n, 507, 
526, 534, 573n 

Tertullian, 330n, 506 

Thompson, J. A., 159n 

Torrance, T. F., 509 

Troost, A., 653 

Tucker, William, 499n 

Turnbull, Colin, 656 

Vandervelde, George, 149n 
Vanderwaal.Comelis, 336n, 523n 
VanGemeren,Willem A., 269 

Vanhoye, Albert, 20n 

Van Til, Cornelius, 44, 58, 441n, 527, 625, 636, 

63740, 640n, 651, 661n 
Van Til, Henry R., 448n 
Victorious, 82, 351 
Virgil, 503n 



703 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Vos, Geerhardus, 13, 37, 39n, 60n, 174, 175 
Vos, Howard F., 136n 

Wallace, Ronald S., 138n, 317n 

Waltke, Bruce, 18n 

Warfield, Benjamin B., 27, 31, 57n, 150n, 215, 

493 
Wenham, Gordon J., 159, 234, 249, 391n, 

446n, 489n 
White, William, Jr., 5n 
Wigner, Eugene, 662 



Wilcock,Michael,58, 80, 155-56 
Wilken, Robert L., 314n 
Williams, Miller, 34 
Wood, Nathan R., 171n 

Woodrow, Ralph, 495n, 522 
Wright, Ruth V., JlOn 

Yates, Frances, 655n 

Zahn.Theodor, 166 

Zullig, C. F. J., 393n 



704 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Aaron, 87, 570, 646 

rod of, 304 
Abaddon, 247 
Abel, 307, 466 

blood of 194, 2 91 
Abimelech, 137-381 298 
Abiram,491 
Abortion, 135, 1518-191 
Abraham, 127, 128,132,201,307 

children of, 101-2 

sons of, 373 
Abyss, 244, 245, 280, 299 J 326-77.1 434. 435, 

460,499,500, 508,526 

angel of the, 247 
Accountability, 1124-251 
Adam, 31 ,71, 104,148,169, 179,278,279, 

288, 307, 510, 527, 536, 537, 567, 632, 647, 

|659.| See also Man, Fall of 

Admah, 226 

Adultery, Israelis, |425-32| Sge also Fornica- 
tion; Harlot, Great; Israel, apostate 
Ahab, 411 
Ahaz, 299 
Ahaziah, 41 1,525 
Air,412 
Albinus, 454 
Alexandra, 440 
Alpha and Omega, 67, 171, 548, l577J See also 

Jesus Christ, as First and Last 
Altar, 16, | 385.1 See a/soOffering(s);Sacrifice(s) 

brazen, 249 

fire of, 232, 374 

incense, [23T33] 248, |272-73j See also 
Incense 

souls underneath. 1 193-941 402 
Amen, 90, 1132-331 225, 469, 580 

Christ as, 132 ^_^ 

Amillennialism, 493, |497-98| 528, 637, 646 

common grace and, 6374-O. I651 -521 

defectiveness of, 1652-541 
Amos, 13, 462 

Ananias, 448 

Ananus, murder of, 604 
Anaphora, 594, 595 



Anarchy, 1115-161 

Ancient of Days, 72, 74, 306 

Angel(s), 81, 260 

activities of, 231 

fallen, 247, 251 

four, 203-5 

of the Presence, 235 

saints' rule of, 576 

sev en, 1 69, 1 230-3 1| , 397 

■■ax. b60-77l 

strong, 460 

worship of, 1478-80)1575^761 
Angel of tbe Lord, 72. 176-771 87, 109, @ 
Angel of the Waters, 400, 401 
Animals. See Beasts 
Anthropomorphisms, 131-321 
Antichrist, 1185-861 347, 526 
Antinomianism, 108, 1652-54] 663 

reconstruction vs. revivalism of, 1548-501 
AntiochliS Epiphanes, 88, 217 

Antipas, 107 

Anti-Semitism, |617-T8l 

Apocalypse. See Revelation, Book of 

Apocalyptic writing, |25-26| 

Apollyon, 247, 434, 435 

Apostasy, I356J See also Apostates; Israel, 

apostate 

beginning of Israel's, 422 
Apostates. l 1 151 See QlsO Satan, synagogue of 

description of, to be judged, 1197-981 

impenitence of, 404, 407, 416. 1418-191 
judgment on, |207| . See also Jerusalem, 
destruction of; Judgment(s) 
Apostles, 292, 554, 559 
Apostles' Creed, 643 
Apostles, false, 89, 95, 101, 108 
Aquarius, 158, 379, 389, 401 

Aramaeans, 408 

Archangel, 312 

Armageddon j411-12j 524 

battle of, 411,520 
Arminianism, 122, 137, 138, 215, 624, 

649 
Artemis, temple to, 93 



705 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



AscaJon, 440 

Ascension, 50,69, 173,576 
definitive, 149 
final, 149 
progressive, 149 

results of Christ's, [222-23| 284-851 290, 1316:1 
Sees.!soJesusChrist, as Conqueror; Jesus 
Christ, mediatorial reign of; Jesus Christ, 
victory of 
Asia Minor. IfrTl 

Asklepios, cult of, 105, 106 

Assurance, 70 
Assyria, 244 
Athaliah,308 

Atonement, 34 ,1 3 1 7l See als o Death of Christ 
Day of, 430. l446-47J|604| 607 
limited, 377 

Basdism, 157, 274, 285, 589 

Babel, Tower of, 422 

Babylon, 19, E3 SeeatsO Jerusalem 

faflof, I362-64H45-661 See also Jerusalem, 
destruction of 

fall of, from Paradise, 1 239-40 1 

the Great, 296, 416, 431 

Harlot of, 1 14,2 95l363-64l 42143 

reaction to fall of, 1452-591 

word, 422 
Babylonian Captivity, 3013, 460 
Balaam, 87, 90, 98, 101,579 
Balaamites,98, 114 
Balak,87,90, 107 
Ban, 232 
Baptism, 206, |384-85 | 

resurrection and. 1517-181 
Bdellium, 110 
Beast, 20,278,325, 364, 408, 442, |529| See 

also Roman Empire; Rome 

appearance of, 327-29 

beast imaged after, 336 

Church vs., 279-80, 281, 438. See also 
Woman 

defeat of, 491-92 

eighth, 436-37 

explanation of, 433-35 

Harlot atop, 428-29,432 

identity of, 435-36 

from Land, 335-52 

mark of, 30-31, 342,355, 398 

number of, 43, 344-52 

rise of, 326-27, 434 

scarlet, 428-29 

from sea, 326-35, 342-43, 428-29 
Beasts, 278-80 

Daniel's, 303, 306 

two, 325-52, 491-92 

unclean, 279 



Bees, Killer, 129 
Behemoth, 306 

as beast from Land, 342-43 

defeat of, 491-92 

Belial, 533 

Bethfehem, 203 

Bible. See Scripture 

Bible Presbyterian Church, 664 

Biblical theology, 37 

Bilhah,211 

Birds of prey, 489-91 

Blindness, 136 

Blood, 390-92, 484 

plagues of, 398-402 

pouring of, 606-8 
Boaz, 426 
Book, 166-68,181 

bittersweet, 268 

little, 261-62 
Book of Life, 312, 334, 435, 533, 534, 569 

controversy about, 122-25 
Bottomless pit, 244. See also Abyss 
Branch, Christ as, 170, 171 
Bride, harlot, 381, 546, 552. See also Harlot, 

Great 

jewels of, 560 
Bride of Christ, 45, 89, 381-82, 463, 473-74, 

545, 552, 554, 579. See also Church 

as army of heaven, 484 
British-Israelitism, 6 1 4 
Buffalo Bill, 12 
BuN, 155, 158 

Ephraim as, 159 
Bulls of Bashan, 279 
Burnt offering, 232. See also Offerhlg(s); 

Sacrifice(s) 

Caesar, August us, 7, 436 

Caesarea, 440 

Caesar, Julius, 7, 218, 436 
Caesars, 33 1-32, 436 

deity assumed by, 7-9 
Caesar, Tiberius, 330, 436 
Caesar, Titus, 376, 439, 440, 455 
Caesar-worship, 105, 1 12. See also Emperor 

cult 
Cain, 194, 307, 632 

Caligula, 436 

Call, effectual, 123 
Calvinism, 122-23, 215 

American, 62A 

Dutch, 624, 652-53 

worship of, 137-38, 153-54 
Canaan, 300 
Canaanites, 236, 524, 631 
Cannibalism, 402 
Cannel, Mount, 411 



706 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Celibacy, 356 
Cestius, 252-53, 258 
Chaldeans, 103 

Chalices, seven, 17, 169, 192, 379-580 

fifth of, 405-7 

first of, 398 

fourth of, 402-4 

last of, 412-19 

negative sacramental character of, 389-90 

second of, 398-400 

sixth of, 407-12 

third of, 400-402 
Chaos, 115-16 

Cherubim, 150, 155-56, 158 
Chiliasm. See MiUenariarrism 
Chosen, The (mm), 613 
Christianity, orthodox, 584-85, 589, See also 

Christians 

Messianic Judaism and, 620-21 

millenariamsm and, 494-97 

pluralism and, 496-97, 585 
Christian Refomred Church (CRC), 624 
Christians. See also Church 

attitude of, toward judgment, 192, ]93. See 
also Suffering; Tribulation(s) 

as conquerors, 549 

faithful, 104, 116, 118 

judgment experienced by, 236-37 

leadership by, 659-61 

sufferings of, 118, 126, 127, 193 

tribulation and first-century, 220-21 
"Christ in the Passover," 620 
Church, 81-82, 147, 325, 585-86. See also Bride 

of Christ 

Beast against, 279-80,281, 438. See <l/SQ 
Rome, church vs. 

beasts and, 279-84 

Dragon assaults, 319-24. See also Woman 

end of age of, 56-57 

atEphesus, 93-99 

Eucharist in, 475-78. See Qlso Eucharist 

false, 244 

gates of hell vs., 313-14 

Glory-cloud in, 552. See also Glory-cloud 

government of, 231. See also elders 

Israel's enmity toward, 40, 103, 106 

kingdom and, 20. See also Kingdom of God 

at Laodicea, 132-39 

as New Jerusalem. See Jerusalem, New 

atPergamum, 104-11 

at Philadelphia, 125-32 

preservation of, 201-2, 322 

response of, to fall of Jerusalem, 458-59 

Rome vs., 8-9. See also Beast, church vs. 

royal priesthood of, 508-9, 510. See also 
priests, kingdom of 

atSardis, 119-25 



at Smyrna, 99-104 
succession of, 17 
survival of, 353 
at Thyatira, 111-18 

as true Israel, 128, 214. See also Israel, new 

as true Temple, 291-93, 392-93, 546-47. See 
also Temple, church as 

unit y of, 82 

universal, 213-16 

worship of, 60-61, 162-64, 317-18, 332-33, 
469-80, See also Liturgy 
Church age, errors about. 56-57, 615-616. See 

also Dispensationalism 
Churches, seven, 17, 41, 81 

angels of, 81 

covenantaj fomr of letters to, 85-86 

errors about, 55-57 

letters to, 85-144 

Old Covenant history and, 86-89 

Revelation's structure in letters to, 89-91 
Church Fathers, 37, 333, 503-4 
Church history, 56. See dlSO history 

world history related to, 232 
Church Year, 22 
Circus Maximus, 224 
Claudius, 241, 436 
Cloud, glory. See Glory-cloud 
Clouds, coming in, 64-67 
Color, 153 
Coming of Christ, First. See First Conring of 

Christ 
Commandments of Christ, See Law of God; 

Ten Commandments 
Commerce, of Jerusalem, 454-56 
Commodus, 656 
Common grace, 498n, 527-28, 623-64 

background of debate on. 624-25 

common ground vs., 661-62 

cooperation and. 658-60 

final judgment and, 646-48 

future grace and, 663 

law of God and, 629-34, 647^8 

Van Til's amUlennial view of, 637.40, 65J.52 
Common ground vs. common grace, 661-62 
Communion, Holy. See Eucharist 
Confession, of Christ, 125 
Constantinople, Council of, 58 
Cooperation, 660 

self-consciousness and, 651-52 

with unregenerate, 658-59 
Cornerstone, Christ the, 555-56 
Cosmic personalism, 204 
Covenant. See also Covenant, New; Covenant, 

Old 

copies of, 167 

creation and, 266-67 

curses of, 17-19.89, 190, 191,489 

description of, 14 



707 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



lawsuit of, 11, 13-20, 268, 466 

nature of, 13 

oath of, 176. See also Oath 

preamble of, 49 

prologue of, 85 

promise of, 176,207 

ratification of, 227 

role of, 10-11 

stipulations of, 141 

succession arrangements of, 14 
Covenant, Abrahamic, 300. See also 

Covenant, New 
Covenant, Ark of the, 87, 234, 261 
Covenant, Davidic, 87. See also Jesus Christ, 

kingdom of 
Covenant, New, 6, 168-69, 173, 263, 389, 566, 

578 

"birth of," 176-77,473 

Christ opens, 188 

establishment of, 413 

ethnic enlargement under, 227 

light of, 570-73 

new creation and, 266-68, 320 
Covenant of Grace, 556. See also Covenant, 

Abrahamic; Covenant, New 
Covenant of Redemption, 215 
Covenant, Old, 292, 416, 566 

curses of, 168-69 

dead believers of, 515 

end of, 6, 413 

history of, and seven churches, 86-89 

night of, 571-72 

worship under, 152 
Craftsmen, 464 

CRC. See Christian Reformed Church 
Creation, 266 

covenant and, 266-67 

doctrine of, 161-62 

God's rule over, 204 

seven eyes and, 173 

symbolism and, 32-33, 158-60 
Creation, new, H0,197, 283, 525, 538, 545. See 

also Heaven(s) and earth, new 

birth of, 290 

new covenant and, 266-68 
unfolding of, 547-48 
Creatures, four living, 150, 174, 185 

identity of, 155-60 
Critical text,45 
Cross of Christ, 568n, 569. See also 

Atonement; Death of Christ 
Crown(s), 153, 187 
Crown of hfe, 104 
Crucifixion of Christ. See Atonement; Death 

of Christ 
Culture 

regenerate, 526-28 



self-consciousness and, 651-52 

unregenerate, 526-28 
Curse(s) 

common, 629, 646 

covenant, 17-19 

reduction of, 642 

removal of, 569 

special, 629, 646, 659 
Cyrus the Persian, 407-8 

Dallas Theological Seminary, 616 

Dan, 212 

Daniel, 43, 101, 263, 346, 371, 576 

beasts of, 303, 306, 328-29 
Darkness, 240-41 
Dathan, 491 
David, 87, 88, 169, 308, 525, 535, 536 

key of, 90 

kingdom of, 514. See also Jesus Christ, 
kingdom of 

offspring of, 578-79 

Root of, 170-71,578-79 
Day of the Lord, 235, 267, 269, 413, 451. See 

also Judgment(s), day of 
Dead 

final judgment of, 532-34 

rest of, 515-16 
Dead Sea, 566 
Death, 191-92, 533, 534 

defilement of, 516 

first, 633 

keys of, 77-'78, 191 

spiritual, at Sardis, 120 

victory over, 366-70. See also Resurrection, 
Christ's 
Death of Christ, 50 7 99, 364-65, 567-68. See 

also Atonement 

collaboration in, 280, 282-83 

Dragon and, 308 

outside Jerusalem, 376-77 
Death penalty, 142, 618-19 
Death, second. See Second death 
Deborah, 417 
De-creation, 196-97, 198 
Dedication, Feast of, 217 
Deification, 278n 
Deism, 157 
Demons, 244, 280, 316-17 

king of, 247 
Depravity, total. See also Fall of man; Sin 

God's restraint of, 629-34 
Deuteronomy 

covenant structure of, 14-15, 379-80 

preamble of, 49 

sanctions of, 225-26 

stipulations of, 141-42 

succession arrangements in, 380-82 



708 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Devil. SeeS atari 

Diana, temple to. See Artemis, temple to 

Dietary laws, 408, 430 

Dionysus, cult of, 105 

Discipline, 96,109, 137 

Disperrsationsdism, 69-70, 129, 146-47. See also 

Rapture theory 

hermeneutic of, 121, 147 

orthodox, 615 

pop-, 616-19 

Scofield-Ryrie,495 

teaching of, 615-16 

white horse in, 185-86 
Doctrine 

love vs., 95-% 

system of, 582 
Doctrine of God, The (Bavinck), 31 
Dogs, 279, 578 
Dominion, 169-70, 180, 587-88. See also 

Culture; Dominion Mandate 

ethics and, 641-44 

knowledge and, 636-37 

promise of, 139 

psalm of, 88 

restoration to, 60 

seven stars and, 76 

Dominion by Covenant (Sutton), 14 

Dominion Covenant. See Dominion Mandate 
Dominion Mandate, 179, 510-11,587,647, 

663-64 
Domitian, 4, 41, 79 
Donatists, 421 
Dooyeweerdians, 652-54 
Dragon, 244, 251, 280, 296, 299, 433, 435, 437, 

474, 499. See also Satan 

beast imaged after, 327 

Church vs., 319-24, 428. See also Woman 

domain of, 318 

fall of, 306 

goal of, 307-10,519 

incarnation of, 435 

release of, 519-20 

Satan as, 3046 

sign of, 303-4 
Dragons, 304-6 
Dry bones, valley of, 536 

Eagle(s), 155, 158, 226-27, 279, 489 

Dan as, 159 

sense of, 241-42 

wings of, 319-20,321 
Earth 

as arena of victory, 386 

covenant with, 266 

flight of, 532 

new. See Heaven(s) and earth, new 

vegetation of, exempted, 246 



Earthquake(s), 184, 196, 285, 413-14 

Easter, 23, 565 

Eating, idolatrous, 108-9, H3 

Ebal, Mount, 225 

Ebionites, 494n, 495 

Eden, Garden of, 16, 78n, 86, 110, 150, 238, 

250, 291, 305, 330, 400,429, 463, 566. See 

also Paradise 

gospel in, 298 
Edom, 375, 461-63 
Edomites, 322 
Edwardians, 649 
Egypt, 300, 304, 307, 363, 460, 535 

Jerusalem as, 281 

plagues nf, 236, 238, 239, 242, 244, 395, 
396, 398, 416, 417. See also Plagues, ten 
Eight, 347, 350, 352, 436 
Eight hundred eighty-eight, 346-47, 350, 352 
Elders, 119 

controversy over twenty-four, 177-78 

as kings, 152-53 

as priests, 152-53 

rule by, 82n 

twenty-four, 150, 151-53, 156, 160, 174, 290, 
508-10, 512, 554, 594 

vestments for, 153-54 
Elect 

gathering of, 372-73, 485-87 

number of, 214-15, 285 
Elijah, 274, 276, 277-78, 281, 285, 310, 525 
Elisha, servant of, 353 
Emerrdd, 150 
Emperor cult, 100, 106 
End, time of, 263 
Ephesus, 6 

angel of, 86 

church condition in, 94-95 

covenantal form of letter to, 85-86 

geography of, 96-97 

importance of, 93-94 

letter to, 86, 89,90,93-99 

occultism in, 94 
Ephraim, 212 
Esau, 307 
Eschatology. See Millennialism; 

Postmillennialism; Premillennialism; Second 

Coming 
Esther, 298, 308 
"Eternal security," 69-70, 122 
Ethical conduct, prophecy and, 27, 54-55 
Ethics, domimonand, 641-44 
Eucharist, 89, 138, 149, 290, 475-78, 481, 545, 

548 

centrality of, 476, 478 
Eunuchs, 356 
Euphrates River, 250, 251, 252, 257, 407, 408, 

423 



709 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Evangelicalism, 69-70 

chicken, 122 

hymns of, 195 
Evangelicals, 36, 37, l32n, 137 

Laodicean, 135 

worship and, 162 

Evangelists' Calendar, 77ie(Goulder),22 

Eve, 71, 109, 115, 278, 288, 299, 314, 527, 632 

sin of, 451 
Evolution 

Darwinian, 644 

theistic, 157 
Excommunication, 273, 341, 373 
Exodus, the, 109, 216-17, 266, 300, 305, 321, 

535, 538 
Eyes 

flaming, 483 

seven, 173 
Ezekiel, 186, 189, 205-6, 268, 415, 417, 426-27, 

536 

Gog and Magog in, vs. Revelation, 522-23 

Revelation influenced by, 20-23, 168 

structure of, 23 
Ezra, 88, 411 

Faith, 533 
Fall 

of Babylon. See Babylon, fall of 

of Jerusalem. See Jerusalem, destruction of 

of man, 279, 304, 327, 346-47, 618, 632. See 
also Depravity, total; Sin 
False Prophet. See Prophet, False 
Famine, 184, 189-91 
Father, God the, 57. See also God 
Favor. See Grace 
Fire, 402, 525-26 

Lake of, See Lake of Fire 
First and Last, 77, 90 

implications of, 100 
First Coming of Christ, 1 17, 503. See also 

Jesus Christ, Advent of; Jesus Christ, 

coming of 
Firstfruits, 357, 359. See also Pentecost 

Five 

months, 244-45 

as number, 245, 469 
Flood, 244, 266, 514, 533, 538, 540 

new, 244 
Footstool, 261 
Forehead 

Harlot's, 430-31 

High Priest's, 31, 205, 483 

mark on, 205-6 

name of Christ on, 570 

seal of God on, 246, 355 
Fornication, 108-9, 113, 115, 356, 424, 428, 

550, 578. See also Adultery; Harlot, Great 



Forty-two 

months, 274-76, 333 

as number, i!75 
Four, 16-17, 155 
Fourteen, 275 
French Revolution, 41, 115 
Frogs, 408-9 
Fundamentalism, 37, 132n, 421. See also 

Arminianism; Dispensationafism; 

Evangelicalism; Evangelicals 
Funerals, 547 
Futurists, 52. Seealso DispensationaJism; 

Premillennialism 

Gabriel, 5, 230, 311 

Gaius, 241 

G alba, 241, 406, 436 

Garments, white. See White garments 

Gehenna, 578 

Gentiles, 5, 116, 214, 261, 265, 318, 438, 473, 

561-63 

conquest of, 485-88 

COUIt of, 273, 448 

hatred of, for Jews, 439-40 
Gerizim, Mount, 225 
Germany, 522 
GessiusFlorus, 244, 252 
Gideon, 235, 524 
Gifts. See also Common grace; Grace 

unregenerate and God's, 624-29 
Glass, sea of, See Sea of glass 
Glory-cloud, 64-65, 71, 122, 149, 154, 222, 247, 

250, 393, 402, 570, 596 

accompaniments of, 232 

clothed with, 259-60, 261 

departure of, from Temple, 552-53 

Pentecost and, 266-67, 552 

voice from, 262 
Gnosticism, 94 
God, 589, See also Father, God the; Holy 

Spirit; Jesus Christ 

concern of, 193 

as Creator, 161, 403 

decree(s) of, 122-23, 334, 492 

diversity of, 58 

eternity of, 59, 67 

history ruled by, 52-53, 59-60 

immutability of, 59, 67 

as Judge, 7071 

majesty of, 388 

names of, 31-32 

omniscience of, 53 

providence of, 157-58 

remembering of, 416 

righteousness of, 470-72 

rule of, 157-58 

secret things of, 263 



710 



SUBJECT INDEX 



sovereignty of, 251, 403-4, 441-42 

Supper of. See Supper of God, great 

unity of, 58-59 

unregenerate and favor of, 624-29. See also 
Common grace 

wrath of, 36466, 383-84, 389-90, 391-92, 
412-13,416. See also Jerusalem, 
destruction of; Judgment(s) 
Godhead, 57. See also Trinity 
Gog, 520-24, 536 
Gold, 557 
Goliath, 345-46 
Gomer, 522 

Gomorrah, 226, 365, 472, 491, 525 
Gospel, 188, 361-62. See also Mystery 

first proclamation of. See Protevangelium 

light of, 563 

triumph of, 215-16. See also Postmillen- 
nialism 
Gospels 

Little Apocalypse in, 182 

Synoptic, 182 
Government 

Church, 231 

origin of, 105 
Grace, 57 

common. See Common grace 

future, 663 

irresistible, 123 

law and, 644-51 

meaning of, 623 

special, 623-24, 629, 645-46 

unregenerate and God's, 624-29 
Grass, burning of, 195, 236 
Great Commission, 510-11 
Greek Orthodox church, 421 
Grief, Biblical, 269, 547 

Habakkuk, prayer of, 184-85 
Hades, 532, 533, 534 

keys of, 77-78, 191 
Hagar, 373 
Hailstones, 417-18 
Hallelujah, 469-70, 472, 473 
Haman, 308 
Hannah, 299 
Harlot, Great, 421-43,471. See also Babylon, 

fall of 

Beast's support of 428-29, 432 

beauty of, 432 

communion of, 430, 431 

confession of, 450 

explanation of, 433-43 

garments of, 429-30 

identity of, 421, 423-32, 442, 457, 465-66 

as mother of harlots, 431 

mystery and, 431, 432 

primary application of, 421 



Harlot, Royal, 89, 90, See also Harlot, Great 
Harlotry, 19, 356. See also Adultery; 

Fornication 
Harps, 384 
Head(s) 

death-wound of one, 329-31 

seven, 327-28, 329 
Heaven, 197, 299 

flight of, 532 

new. See Heaven(s) and earth, new 

silence in, 229-30 

true church in, 244, 332-33. See also 
Ascension; Church, worship of 
Heaven(s) and earth, new, 537-45, 570. See 

also Creation, new 

Isaiah's, 538-39 

Peter's, 539-42 

phrase, 540-42 

scope of, 543-44 

time of, 538 
Hell, 283. See also Hades 

false church in, 244 

gates of, 313-14 
Heresy. See also Apostasy; Apostates 

Jezebel's, 113-14, 115 

warning against, 109 
Heretics, 116 
Herod Agrippa, 241 
Herod Antipas, 241, 280, 282, 438 
Herod the Great, 217, 241, 310 
Hezekiah, 229 
High Priest(s), 87, 241, 327 

apparel of, 74, 220 

breastplate of, 557 

Christ as, 50, 153, 272 

description of, 74-75 

forehead of, 31, 205, 483 
Historical theology, 38 
History, 170-71, 459. See also Church history 

biblical philosophy of, 180 

Christ as central to, 173 

differentiation in, 634-35, 642.44 

goal of, 1 80 

God's sovereignty over, 52, 59-60, 100,506 

meaning in, 632-34 

progress in, 642-44 

separation in, 634-35 

threat of, 639 

world, related to church history, 233 

worship related to, 61, 232-33 
Hivites, 632 
Holocaust, 205, 285. See also Jerusalem, 

destruction of 
Holy of hofies, heavenly, 150. See also 

Tabernacle Temple 
Holy Spirit, 57, 276, 292 

being in the, 70-71, 148 



711 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



seaf of, 205, 206 

as seven Spirits, 60-61, 90, 91, 119, 154, 173 

sword of. See Sword, two-edged 
Hom(s), 248, 249 

seven, 172-73 

ten, 327,328-29,437,440,442 
Horse(s) 

black, 189-91 

blood-red, 188-89,195 

green, 195 

white. See White horse(s) 
Horsemen, four, 181, 183-91, 194 

sense of, 183-84 
Hosea, 426 

covenant form of, 15, 227 
Hover, 320 
Humarrism, 278n 
Humanitarianism, 269 
Hyperbole, 35-36 

Idolatry, 113, 115,334,356,478,550, 578. See 

also Eating, idolatrous 

Jewish, 339-41 

lying and, 357-58 

nature of, 339 
Ik, 656, 662 
Incense, 235, 595 

altar of, 272-73 

bowls of, 174 

offering of, 229-36, 600-601, 605-6 
Infants, 646 

accountability and, 124-25 
interpretive maximalism, 36-39 
Iron, rod of, 309 
Isaac, 87, 131, 373 
Isaiah, 13, 538-39 
Ishmael, 87,131 
Islands, 197 
Israel, 6. See also Jerusalem; Jews 

apostate, 40, 89, 118, 126-27, 129, 198-99, 
236, 240, 338-41 

blood over, 376-77 

church as true, 128, 214 

destruction of, 43. Seealso Jerusalem, 
destruction of 

disinheritance of, 1 7 

in Egypt, 86-87 

emperor worship of, 331-32, 338, 341 

exile of, 88 

harlotry of. See Harlot, Great 

ideal, 2067 

land of, See Land, the 

new, 249, 376. See also Jerusalem, New 

Rome's ownership of, 342. See also Israel, 
emperor worship of 

salvation of, 66, 214-15 

tribes of. See Tribes of Israel 



true, 102-3, 201-24 
wife imagery of, 19-20 
Israel, New, 82 

Jacob, 159, 307, 422 

sons of, 211 
James, 418 
Jasper, 150, 554, 5s7 
Jehovah's Witnesses, 336 
Jehu, 471 

Jeremiah, 334-35, 423, 425 
Jericho, 173, 214, 236 
Jerry Falwelland the Jews (Simon), 617 
Jerusalem. See also Israel; Jews 

Babylon and, 19, 362-64 

under ban, 232 

bondage of, 456-57 

Christ's cleat h outside, 377, 607 

commerce of, 454-56 

demons in, 244 

destruction of, 4, 7, 184-85, 189-92, 207, 225, 
246,264, ?85, 291-93, 457585 

as Egypt, 281 

as Great Hal lot, 423-32, 442, 457, 465-66 

heavenly. See Jerusalem, New 

invasion army against, 250-53 

mourners over, 452-59 

New. See Jerusalem, New 

old, 131-32, 373, 414-16 

power of, 442-43. See also Jews, 
influence of 

rebuilding of, 88 

as Sodom, 281 

temporal extent of fall of, 461-63 

threefold divison of, 415-16 
Jerusalem Council, 108, 116 
Jerusalem, New, 88, 131-32, 373, 525, 536, 

545-46, 549, 552-63, 566-73 

foundation stones of, 555-56, 557-60 

gates of, 209', 554-55 

Glory-cloud in, 561. See also Glory-cloud 

gold street of, 559-6o 

light in, 561,570-73 

measurements of, 556-57 

nations come to, 561-63 

order of foundation stones of, 558-60 
Jesse, 170, 171 
Jesus (priest), 455 
Jesus (prophet), 453 
Jesus Christ, 5, 147. See also Ancient of Days: 

God; Son of God; Son of Man 

Advent of, 285, 320, 503. See also First 
Coming o f Christ; Son of Man, 
Advent of 

as Alpha and Omega. See Alpha and Omega 

as Amen. See Amen, Christ as 

as angel, 259-61, 499 



712 



SUBJECT INDEX 



as Beginning of Creation, 133 

birth of, 298-300, 308-9 

body of. See Bride of Christ; Church 

BOW of, 186-87 

as Branch. See Branch, Christ as 

as Bridegroom, 45, 381-82. See also Bride of 

Christ 
Caesar vs., 8-9. See also Beast; Nero; 

Roman Empire; Rome 
coming of, 64-67, 109, 121, 130, 410, 575, 

577. See also First Coming of Christ 
commandments of. See Law of God 
as Conqueror, 169-70, 180, 188, 224, 315-17. 

See also Jesus Christ, victory of 
deity of, 77 

as First and Last. See First and Last 
as Firstborn from dead, 61, 62, 63 
as High Priest. See High Priest(s), Christ as 
as Judge, 192,529-31 
kingdom of, 10, 43, 117, 494, 508-19, 545 
as King of Kings, 62-64, 117, 192, 246, 

354-55, 488-89 
as Lamb, 18, 29, 171-73. See also Lamb of 

God 
as Lampstand, 72 
as Lion, 29, 169-70 
lordship of, 9-10, 39-40, 43-44, 50, 60, 

105-6, 290 
mediatorial reign of, 493-94. See also 

Ascension; Millennium 
as Michael, 311-18. See also Michael 
as Prophet, See Prophet, Christ as 
redemptive work of, 50 
reigning with, 508-19 
as Root of David, 170-71, 578-79 
time of birth of, 301-3 
victory of, 215-16, 223,459 
voice of, 75, 146, 154, 262 
warfare of, 481-92 
as Witness, 61-62, 133,481 
Jewish War,The(iosepims), 225, 246 
Jews, 100, 265. See also Israel; Jerusalem; 
Judaism 
apostate, 126, 253. See also Satan, 

synagogue of 
carnage of, 439-40 
church at enmity with, 103, 106. See also 

Church, Israel's enmity toward 
condemnation of, 128 
demons as scourge of, 245 
demons worshiped by, 256. See also 

Jerusalem, demons in 
hardness of, 255, 257 
identity of modern, 613-14 
influence of, 438-39 
leaders of, as beast, 337-38 
orthodox, 102 



Palestine and, 613 

synagogues of, 341, 344, 438-39 

true vs. false, 101-3, 127-28 
Jezebel, 87, 88, 90, 101, 379, 439, 471 
Job, 103, 342 
Jochebed, 299 
John, Apostle 

background of, 2-3 

in the Spirit, 70-71 

style of, 26 

worldview of, 26, 67-69 
John the Baptizer, 276, 277-78, 361, 375, 512 
Jonah, 11, 244 
Jordan River, 407 
Joseph, 87, 212, 479 
Joshua (priest), 276, 314 
Joshua (son of Nun), 217, 278, 380, 411, 524 
Josiah, 411 
Judah, 212 

Chnstas lion of, 169-70 

house of, 308 

Lion of, 158, 159 
Judaism, 585 

apostate, 106, 336-38 

Christian Zionism and messianic, 612-19 

messianic, 619-21 

Pharisaical, 88 

reprobate, 448-49 

Talmud and, 618 
Judas, 123 

Judas Maccabaeus, 217 
Judgment(s), 64-66, 115. See also Jerusalem, 

destruction of 

on Christians, 236-37. See also Suffering 

common grace and final, 646-48 

day of, 408, 409, 540. See also Last Day 

in Eden, 71 

on Jews, 128, 184-85, 189-92, 373-74. See 
also Land, the 

Last, 495, 504, 529-34 

nature of, 268-69, 285, 373 

praise and, 470 

prayer for, 194-95, 239, 249-50, 374, 
459 

seven, of sixth seal, 196-97 

signs of, 253-55 
Julian the Apostate, 655 
Julius Caesar. See Caesar, Julius 
Jupiter, Temple of, 406 
Justification, 122, 136 

faith and, 533 

works and, 533 

Key(s) 

of David, 90, 126 

of Death and Hades, 77-78, 90, 499 
Khazars, 613-14 



713 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Kingdom of God, 10, 43, 287-88, 442-43, 
635. See also Jesus Christ, kingdom of 

age of, 510 

Church into, 20 

coming of, 69-70, 293, 315, 361, 500-503 

expansion of, 510-11 

priestly, 508-10. See also Priests, kingdom 
of; Priests, royal 

sphere of, 514-15 

thousand-year, 508-19. See also Millennium 

tribulation and, 68 

triumph of, 330-31, 3S4-55, 504-6 
Kings, 458 

elders as, 152-53 

lament of, 452-54 

ten, 437 
Knowledge 

common, 631 

dominion and, 636-37 

of law of God, 631-32 

special, 631 
Korah, 491 

Lake of Fire, 386, 491, 534, 573 
Lamb of God, 18, 26, 34, 171-73, 595 

army of, 356 

Bride of. See Bride of Christ 

Marriage Supper of. See Marriage Supper of 
the Lamb 

on Mount Zion, 354-55 

Song of. See Song of Moses and of Lamb 
Lamech,514n, 644n 
Lamps lands 

seven, 72, 78, 90, 91,94, 150, 154 

seven, described, 80, 81-83 

two, 276-77 
Land, 261, 266 
Land, the, 16, 198, 203, 242, 282, 291, 318, 

319, 322, 325, 331, 375. See also Israel; 

Jerusalem; 

beast from, 335-52 

burning of, 236, 237 

in New Testament, 618 

preaching to leaders of, 361-62 

use of, 129 
Laodicea, 379, 450 

importance of, 132 

letter to, 88-89,91, 132-39 

lukewarmness at, 134-35 
Last Day, 65, 494, 547 

judgment of, 529-34 
Last days, 16,51, 65-66, 68, 88, 98, 181, 189, 

236, 338, 340, 448, 453, 460, 473 

church of, 357 

signs during, 253-57, 540 
Laver, 155, 384-85, 566 

fiery, 385-86, 491 



Law, God's rule by, 157. See also Law of God 
Law of God, 57, %, 142, 187, 366. See also 
Dietary laws; Ten Commandments 
common grace and, 629-34 
grace and, 64451 
knowledge of, 631-32 
special grace and, 629 
work of, 641-42 
Leah, 211, 212, 555 
Leaven, 504-6 
Len, 158, 389 
Levi, 212,559 

Leviathan, 251, 280, 304, 305, 538. See also 
Beast 

as beast from sea, 342-43 
defeat of, 491-92 
Levites, 225, 402 
LextahomsJ98, 314,450 
Liberals, 36 
Libra, 190 

Lie(s), 357-58, 550, 578 
Light(s) 

Christians as, 553-54, 562 
New Covenant as, 570-73 
Lion, 155, 279 

Christ as Judah's, 169-70 
Judah as, 158, 159 
Literafism, 38, 521, 556-57 
Literature, Bible as, 28 

Liturgy, 54, 160, 163, 164. See also Eucharist; 
Worship 

antiphonal, 469-73 
heavenly, 235 
need of, 219 

Revelation's, 594-97,601-2 
trumpets in Old Testament, 234, 235 
Locusts, 244-45, 246 
Lord, Day of the. See Day of the Lord 
Lord of hosts, 67, 242, 312 
Lord's Day, 50, 71, 477, 478. See also Sabbath 

origin of, 70 
Lord's Supper. See Eucharist 
Lot, 479, 645 
Love 

doctrine vs., 95-96 
first, 95 
Lukewarmness, 134-35 

Maccabees, 520 
Magi, 160, 302 
Magog, 520-24, 536 
Majority Text, 44-45 
Malachi, 277 
Man 

accountability of, 124-25 

autonomous, 122 

binding of, 500-504 



714 



SUBJECT INDEX 



choices of unregenerate, 642 

Fall of. See Fall of man 

form of,155, 158 

good done by, 630-31 

longevity of, 514, 644, 646, 653n 

number of, 345 

Reuben as the, 159 

unregenerate, and grace, 624-34. See also 
Common grace 
Manasseh, 212 
Manna, hidden, 87, 109 
Marcionism, 365 
Mark Antony, 218 
Marriage Supper of the Lamb, 89, 382, 

468-80. See also Eucharist 
Martyrs, 194-95,316,367-69,512-13, 595-96 
Marxism, 495 

threat of, 656-57 
Mary, virgin, 298,299, 310, 313. See also 

Woman 
Megiddo, 411-12 
Merchants, 448, 457, 458, 464-65 

lament of, 454 
Mercy-seat, 150,235 
Meshech, 522 
Methuselah, 514n, 644,646 
Micaiah, 408 
Michael, 316, 319 

Dragon vs., 311-18,437 

identity of, 311-13 
Midianites, 524 
Mill, 464 

grinding at, 426 

Millenarianism 

church's rejection of, 494 
two forms of, 494-95 
Millennium, 515, 518, 519, 520, 525, 573, 
584-85,615. See oto Kingdom of God; One 

thousand 

central question about, 493-94 

orthodox Christianity and, 494-97 

unity regarding, 494 

views on, 493-98 
Millstone, 460 
Monasticism, 548 
Moon, 297, 301-2, 303 

bloodlike, 195 

darkened, 240-41 
Moral Majority, 619 
Mormonism, 256, 278n, 336 
Moscow, 522 
Moses, 32,128, 169,201,217,234,277,278, 

281, 283, 288, 320, 335, 380, 382, 535, 570, 

646 

body of, 312 

Jews and, 102 

law of. See Law of Grid, Ten Commandments 



rod of, 304 
Moslems, 612, 614, 618 
Mountain(s), 197, 265 

holy, 238, 354-55 

moving of, 238-39, 460 
Mountain People, The (Turnbull), 656 
Minister Revolt, 495 
Murderers, 550, 578 
Music, 163, 164, 464. See also Liturgy 

lOss of, 463 
Myriads, 250, 251 
Mystery. See also Gospel 

of God, 26546, 267, 286, 292 

Harlot and, 431, 432 

Nahum, 65 

Nakedness, 136, 439 

Name, new, 87, 111 

Natural law, 157, 400, 589 

Nature, 157 

Nazism, 495, 613 

Nebo, Mount, 382 

Nebuchadnezzar, 279, 346 

Neco, 411 

Nehemiah, 88 

Neoplatonism, "spiritualistic," 472 

Nero, 35, 41, 79, 218, 241, 325, 418, 434, 

436 

as Beast, 329, 344-45, 350, 351, 583 

persecution under, 4 

redivivuS myth about, 330 
New Testament, 101-2 
New Year's Day, Old Covenant, 235, 301 

Judaism and, 289 

Nicea, Council of, 58 
Nicene Creed, 119 
Nicolaitans, 97-98, 101, 107, 114 

doctrine of, 108-9 
Nicolas, 97 
Nde, 238 
Ninevah, 11, 424 
Nosh, 167, 186, 288, 474, 514, 644, 645, 646, 

647 
North, 250-51 

Oath, 266, 577. See also Covenant 
Occultism, 158-59. See also Sorcerers 

Jewish, 94, 465 
Octavian, See Caesar, AugUtUS 
Offering(s). See also Sacrifice(s) 

burnt, 608 

daily, 603 

drink, 608 

incense. See Incense, offering of 

meal, 603 

purification, 248-49, 391 
Oil, 191 



715 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Old Testament, 101-2 

Jews and the, 101-2,127,618 

threefold message of, 449 
Olives, Mount of, 552 
Omer,603 
One hundred and forty-four thousand, 206-7, 

227, 273, 296, 355, 359 

identity of, 355 

number, 206 
One thousand, 285. See also Millennium 

number, 506-7 

as unit of division, 206 
Otho, 240, 406 
Overcoming, 98-99, 117, 125, 139, 386, 513, 549 

Paganism, 33n, 278n 
common grace and, 659 
compromise with, 113-14, 120 
Jerusalem abed with, 429, 471 

Palestine 

conquest of, 614 

Jewish views on, 613 
Palestinians, 612 
Palm branches, 218 
Papacy, 421 
Paradise, 29, 99, 110, 216, 536, 539, 547, 

556, 557. See also Creation, new; Eden, 

Garden of 

restoration to, 566-73 
Parousia, 434-35, 509. See also Jesus Christ, 

coming of 
Passover, 143 
Patmos, 6, 70 
Patriarchs, 86, 176, 554 
Peace, 57, 188 

price of world, 282 
Pearls, 559 
Pentecost, 62, 143, 205, 255, 392, 439, 473 

Glory-cloud and, 266-67, 552 
Pergamum, 6, 579 

faithfulness at, 107 

importance of, 105 

letter to, 87, 90, 104-11 
Perseverance, 69-70, 122-24, 366-70, 588 
Pestilence, 184 
Pharaoh, 176, 217,321 
Philadelphia 

letter to, 88, 125-32 

persecution of church at, 128-30 
Phineas (priest), 87 
Phineas (Temple treasurer), 455 
Pietism, 548, 662 

vengeance and, 194-95 
Pilate, 282, 347, 411n, 438, 515 
Pillars, 261, 264-65, 266 
Plagues, 87, 238, 239, 580. See also Egypt, 

plagues of 



locust, 244-45 
seven, 169, 296, 383-93 
ten, 87, 395 
"Plain sense," 38 
Pleiades, 75 
Pluralism, 496-97 
Politics, power of, 511-12 
Postmillenarianism, 495 
Postmillennialism, 69n, 493, 494, 4%, 528, 

635, 637, 647 

Chalcedon's, 639n 

generic, 498 

optimism of, 662-64 

requirements of, 650 

response of, to Van Til, 640-41 

term, 497 

universalist and, 519 
Poverty, 101 
Prayer, 163, 174, 192,231 

forbidden, 334-35 

Habukkuk's, 184-85 

mountain moved by, 238-39 

m Temple ritual, 604-5 

for vengeance, 194-95, 239, 249-50, 459 
Prayer Book, Anglican, 594 
Prayer, imprecatory. See Prayer, for 

vengeance 
Predestination, 100,122-23,192 
Premillennialism, 69n, 129, 494-95, 635, 637, 

See also Rapture theory 
Priests, 272 

apostasy and, 422 

elders aa, 152-53 

examination of, 220 

kingdom of, 64, 273 

royal, 508-9, 510 

twenty-four courses of, 151 
Prophecy, 10, See also Prophets 

beginning of, 29 

ethical conduct and, 27, 54-55 

hyperbole m, 35-36 

interpretatic.i of, 581 

nature of, 11, 27-28, 461 

purpose of, 1 1 

tree, 336 
Prophet, Christ as, 270, 283 
Prophet, False, 20, 336, 408, 528. See also 

Idolatry, Jewish; Israel, apostate 

defeat of, 491-92 

extent of demonic power of, 341-44 

identity of, 342-43 
Prophets, 148, 466 

apocalyptists vs., 26-27 

God's people as, 148-49, 479, 569, 
574-75 

grief of, 269 

role of, 15 



716 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Prophets, false 

appearance of, 337 

Jewish, 338-39 
Protestant Reformed Church, 624, 625, 664 
Protestants, 421 

rationalistic, 219 
Protevangelium, 298, 300 
Psalms, 194-95 

Hallel-, 470 
Ptolemais, 440 
Puritanism, liturgical, 24-25 
Puritans, 655 

Rachel, 211, 212, 299,555 
Rahab, 304, 305 
Rainbow, 150, 167, 260 
Rapture theory, 149. See also 

Dispensationalism; Premillennialism 

Kingdom parables and, 634-35 

pretribulation, 128-29, 146-47, 615 
Rebekah, 299, 307 

Reconstruction, antinomian revivalism vs , 648-50 
Redemption, 50, 87, 176-77. See also Salvation 
Reformation, 41, 153, 477, 655 
Reformed faith. See Calvinism; Reformation 
Regeneration, universal, 650-51 
Remnant, 88, 207, 214, 227, 357 

seven-thousand, 285 
Repentance, 96, 109 
Rest , 70 

Restitution, 449-50 
Resurrection(s), 50 

age of, 517 

bodily, 331 

ceremonial, 516 

Christ's, 101, 284, 290, 316, 517 

first, 104, 508-19, 536, 547 

second, 516, 517 

two, 516 
Reuben, 559 
Revelation, Book of 

arrangement of, 2, 17, 78-79, 167-68, 565 

authorship of, 1-3 

basic message of, 576 

contemporary focus of, 582-83 

covenant form of, 13-20, 46, 85, 141, 295, 
379 

date of, 3-6 

destination of, 6-10 

erroneous views of, 11-13, 79-80 

Ezekiel's influence on, 20-23, 168 

four sets of judgment in, 89, 422 

function of, 575 

Gospel of John compared with, 1-2 

lessons of, 581-90 

Levitical symbolism in, 593-611 

liturgical character of, 22-25, 593, 59497, 601-2 



liturgical structure of, 610-11 

nature of, 11, 13, 25-27, 51, 53, 263-64, 593 

outline of, 45-47 

purpose of, 39-44, 51, 352, 582 

relevance of, 40-41, 43-44, 581 

Roman Empire in, 325 

Scripture concluded by, 580 

structure of, 23, 89, 231, 295-96 

succession arrangements in, 379-82 

symbolism of, 27-31, 53, 79 

text of, 44-45 
Revelation, special, 5, 292 

events and, 175-77 

Israel's fate and, 13 

mystery and, 265-66 
Revivalism, antinomian, 648-50 
River Of Life, 158, 519, 536, 566, 569 
Robes, white. See White garments 
Roman church, 477 
Roman emperors, 76, 327-28. See also 

Caesars; Roman Empire; Rome 
Roman Empire, 40, 118, 221, 269, 270. See 

also Rome 

beast of, 180, 327-35, 344, 433-36. See also 
Beast 

claims of, 105 

Jews allied with, 103, 429 

in Revelation, 325 
Roman Mass, 594 
Rome, 78, 323, 421. See also Roman Empire, 

beast of. 

Christ's kingship vs., 63-64 

church vs., 8-9, 130 

salvational claims of, 218 
Rosh, 522 

Rosh Hashanah, 289, 290, 301 
Russia. See Soviet Union 
Ruth, 426 

Sabbath, 60-61. See also Lord's Day 
nature of, 267 
original, 70-71 

weekly, 71 
Sabinus, 406 
Sackcloth, 276, 277 
Sacraments, 163, 549. See also Baptism; 

Eucharist 
Sacrifice(s). See also Atonement; Offering(s) 

Christ's, 172. See also Death of Christ 

feast on, 609 

Iamb, 598, 603 

preparation of lamb, 601-2 

Temple, 597-600 
Saint(s), 291-92 

angels ruled by, 576 

perseverance of. See Perseverance 

reign of, 508-19 



717 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



St. Peter's Basilica, 224 

Salvation, 387-88, 579, 588-89. See also 

Redemption 

faith and works in, 533 

judgment and, 266-69, 285, 388 

"loss"of, 122,650 

nature of, 538 

purpose of, 179-80 

through chaos, 1 15 

Samuel, 335 
Sanctification, 136,475 
Sarah, 299, 307 
Sardis, 410 

letter to, 88, 119-25 

secularization at, 120-21 
Sardius, 150, 554 
Satan, 26, 44, 78, 86, 87, 216, 2%, 313,433. 

See also Dragon 

beasts and, 278-80 

binding of, 499-508 

children of, 101, 102 

counterfeits of, 342-44 

crushing head of, 330-31 

deep things of, 1 15 

defeat of, 525-26 

as devil, 103 

domain of, 412 

as Dragon, 304-8 

fall of, 245,315-17 

final rebellion of, 657-58, 661 

God's rule over, 53, 499-508 

slander of, 314 

synagogue of, 88, 91, 103, 106, 1 14, 127, 344 

throne of, 106 
Scqfield Bible, 41, 615. See also 

Dispensationalism 

errors of, 55-57 
Scorpio, 158, 389 
Scorpion, 301, 306 
Scripture. See also Revelation, special 

canon of, 5, 6 

evangelical interpretation of, 36 

interpreting, 36-39. See a/so Biblical 
theology; symbolism 

liberal interpretation of, 36 

nature of, 10 

Revelation concluding, 580 

symbolism of, 27-35. See also 
symbolism 

unity of, 535 
Sea, 203, 261, 266, 318 

beast from, 326-35, 342-43, 344 

bloody, 398-400 

Seal 

of God, 246, 342 
purpose of, 206 
of Spirit, 205, 206 



Seals, seven, 17, 141-224, 389 

arrangement of, 195 

breaking of six of, 181-99 

fifth of, 181 

last of, 181, 229 

sense of breaking, 1 8 1 

sixth of, 181, 196-97, 201 
Sea of Galilee, 399 
Sea of glass, 150, 154-55, 384-86 
Sea, Red, 321, 384 
Second Coming, 43, 129, 264, 315-16, 494, 544, 

572, 589. See also Judgment(s), day of; Last 

Day 
Second death, 104, 532, 534, 550, 573, 633 
Secret things of God, 263 
Secularism, 643 

Seed of Woman, 307-8. See also Woman 
Self-consciousness 

cooperation .andepistemological, 651-52 

culture and, 651-52 

epistemological,577, 636, 642-44, 651-52, 
654-56 

reprobate and, 638 
Seneca, 218 
Septuagint, 244, 299 
Seraiah.,461 
Seraphim, 155, 160 
Serpent. See Satan 
Serpents, 279 
Seth, 307 

Seven,16-17,81-82, 274, 345, 506 
Seven chalices. See Chalices, seven 
Severe churches, See Churches, seven 
Seven seals. Se% Seafs, seven 
Seven Spirits, 60-61, 90, 91, 119, 154, 173, 574 
Seven thousand, 285 
Seven trumpets. See Trumpets, seven 
Shadow of Almighty, 221-22, 322, 402 
Shekinah glory, See Glory-cloud 
Sheol,533 

Sheridan (general), 12 
Shipping industry, lament of, 457-58 
Sickle, 372, 373, 374 
Simeon (of Luke 2), 217 
Simeon (patriarch), 212, 559 
Sin. See a/so Depravity, total 
fullness of, 195 
God's restraint of, 629-34 
infants under, 124-25 
origin of, 441-42 
Sinai, Mount, 373 
Singing, 163, 164. See also Music 
Six, 345, 348, 349, 352 
Six hundred sixty-six 
meaning of, 351-52 
number, 344.52 
Slaughter, 19-20 



718 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Smyrna, 6 

letter to, 86-87, 89, 90, 99-104 

problems at, 100 

tribulation of church at, 103-4 
Sodom, 226, 281, 363, 365, 453, 472, 491, 525 
Solomon, 289, 350, 363, 525, 535 
Song, new, 175-78, 355-56 
Song of Moses, 217, 386, 395, 460 
Song of Moses and of Lamb, 381, 386-87, 402 
Song of Solomon, 33, 298 
Song of Witness, 380-82, 386 

covenant structure of, 380 
Son of God, 87, 90, 112. See also Jesus Christ 
Son of Man, 50, 66, 306. See also Jesus Christ 

advent of, 484 

reign of, 371-72, 510-11 

sign of, 287 

vision of, 72-76, 89 
Sorcerers, 550, 578. See also Occultism 
Soviet Union, 659-60. See a/so Marxism 

Gog and Magog and, 520-22 
Speculation, checks on, 38-39 
Spirits, three unclean, 408-9. See also Demons 
Star(s), 160, 196-97 

darkened, 240-41 

Israel likened to, 159 

morning, 579 

one third of, cast down, 306 

twelve, 297, 300-301, 303, 554 
Stars, seven, 75-76, 78, 90,94, 119, 158 

description of, 80 
State, 64, 78. See also Rome 

Worshipers of, 101, 106, 364, 398, 435. See 
also Emperor cult 
Stephen, 283 
Stone, onyx, J10 
Stone, white, 87, 109,110 
Suffering, 68-70, 118. See also Tribulation 

godliness and, 407 

purpose of, 39-40 
Sun, 260, 301-2, 303, 553-54 

black, 196, 240 
Supper of God, great, 489-91 
Sword, two-edged, 105, 484, 485-86 
Symbolism 

astronomical, 158-60, 300-303 

Creation's, 32-33 

meaning of, 29, 80-81 

nature of Biblical, 33-34, 582 

primacy of, 31-36 

Revelation's, 27-31, 53, 79 

system of, 29-30, 38-39, 582 
Synagogues. See also Satan, synagogue of 

Christian, 372 

of Jews, 341, 344 

messianic, 619 
Syria, 440, 520 



Systematic theology, 38 

Tabernacle, 16, 130, 150, 155, 266, 380, 381, 

392, 596. See also Temple 

heavenly, 388-89, 546-47 
Tabernacles, Feast of, 143, 216, 596 

meaning of, 222-23 
Talmud, 254, 336, 618 
Tannin, 304, 306 
Tares, 526-27, 528, 634-35 

parable of, 634, 65 1 
Tarichaeae, massacre of, 399-400 
Tau, 205-6 
Taurus, 75, 158, 389 
Temple, 2-3, 88, 130, 266, 385, 392, 426, 464, 

536, 557, 597-609. See also Tabernacle 

Church as, 291-93, 392-93, 441.See<?&0 
Jerusalem, New 

cleansing of, 217-18, 273, 448 

destruction of, 440 

earthly, 291 

heavenly, 291-93, 388-89. See also 
Tabernacle, heavenly 

incense ceremony in, 229-30, 600-601,605-6 

measuring the, 272-74 

pillars of, 261 

prayers in, 6045. See also prayer 

Sabbath services in, 386-87 

vision of, 149-51 

voice from, 397, 412 
Temptation, 500-501 

40 days of, 217 

40 years of, 217 
Tempter. See Satan 
Ten, 437 
Ten Commandments, 142, 167, 264, 292. See 

also Law of God 
Testimony, 264, 266, 388-89. See also Witness 

of Jesus, 70, 392, 512, 513 

tent of, 265, 381, 392 
Textus Receptus, 45n 
Three and a half 

days, 283 

as number, 274 

years, 274, 275n, 321, 348 
Throne(s), 60-61, 65, 192, 472 

centrality of, 142, 149 

chariot-, 149, 155 

Satan's, 106 

twenty-four, 151 

vision of, 149-50, 155 
white, 529 
Thunder, 473 

seven peals of, 262-63 
Thyatira, 579 

doctrinrd laxity at, 113 

letter to, 87-88, 90, 111-18 
Tiberius Caesar. See Caesar, Tiberius 



719 



THE DAYS OF VENGEANCE 



Titus Caesar. See Caesar, Thus 

Tobolsk, 522 

Transfiguration, mount of, 281 

Treatise on the Religious Affections (Edwards), 

649 
Treaty of the Great King (Kline), 14 
Tree(s), 203, 236 

fig, 238-39 

olive, 276, 277 

word, 567 
Tree of Life, 78n, 82, 86, 109, 457, 567-68, 

569, 578 

Cross as, 568 

Fruitfulness of, 568 

healing leaves of, 568-69 

identity of, 99 
Tribes of Israel, 357 

arrangement of, 159, 234 

order of, m Revelation, 208-12 
Tribulation, 68, 87-88, 101. See also 

Suffering 

early Christians and, 220-21 
Tribulation, Great, 16, 19, 20, 68, 69, 114, ls4, 

196, 219-20, 221, 225, 321, 399, 520, 585 

birth through, 223 

world in, 405 
Trinity, 57. See also Godhead 

doctrine of, 58-59 
Trumpets, 234-35 
Trumpets, Day of, 235, 252, 301 

significance of, 288-90 
Trumpets, seven, 17, 20, 169, 181, 191, 225-377, 

389, 3% 

first of, 235-37 

second of, 238-39, 398 

third of, 239-40 

fourth of, 240-42, 402 

fifth of, 243-47 

sixth of, 248-57, 286, 407 

seventh of, 267, 286-93, 301 
Truth, 357 
Tubal, 522 
Twelve, 152 
Twenty-four, 152 
Tyre,21, 244,424,440,463 
Tynmnos, 112 

Unification Church, 256, 336 
Universalism, JI9| 53 4>6 50-51 
Unleavened Bread, Feast of. See Passover 

Vengeance, cry for, 194-95. See also Prayer, 

for vengeance 
Vespasian, 376, 399, 406, 434 
Vineyard, judgment on, 374-77. See also Israel 
Virgin Birth, 33n, 298 
Virgins, 356 



Virgo, 300, 301, 302 
Vitellius, 241,406 

Warfare, 143, 184, 188-89. See also 
Judgment(s); Woman 
Christ engaged in, 481-92 
final, 519-29 
holy, 295-324 
trumpets and holy, 234 
Waste, 320 

Water of life, 549, 552, 566, 579 
Waters 

Angel of the See Angel of the Waters 
bitter, 239-40 

many, 423-24, 429, 438, 473 
significance of, 438-39 
Wealth, 136 
Weather, 204 
Westminster Confessionof Faith, 533, 643, 

655 
Westminster Larger Catechism, 340 
Westminster Shorter Catechism, 482 
Wheat, 526-27, 528, 634-35, 651 
White garments, 122, 136, 195, 220 
White, horse(s), 195, 481, 484 
dispensational view of, 185-86 
identity of rider of, 185-88 
Wilderness, 428, 446-48 
Wind(s), 197, 203 

four, 183, 19" 
Wine, 191 

Babylon's, 3.63 
new, 177 
Winepress, 604 
Witness, 266 

Christ as, 61-62, 70, 133, 259-70, 481 
double, 450 
symbols of, 264-65 
Witnesses 
beheaded, 512-13 
death of two, 281-83 
resurrection of, 283-84 
two, 276-78, 306 
Woe(s), 242, 453-54 
first, 244-47, 286 
second, 248-57, 286 
third, 286 
Woman, 553-54 

Dragon vs., 307-10, 313, 319, 321-24, 

428 
flight of, 309.10 
seed of, 298, 305, 307-8 
sign of, 297-300 
Word of God, 50, 300. See also Scripture 
Christ as, 484 
inerrant, 59 
lOss of, 464 



720 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Works, 121 

damnation by, 533 
World 

end of, 515 

salvation of, 66, 215-16, 223, 242, 588 
World Council of Churches, 421 
wormwood, 240 
Worship, 24-25, 54, 334, 469-80, 587. See also 

Liturgy; Revelation, liturgical character of 

components of, 163-64 

corporate, 162-63, 164 

in heaven, 317-18,469 

history and, 61, 232-33 

liturgy in, 163-64 

Old Covenant, 152 

orderly, 163 

Puritan, 24-2S 

responsorial, 163 

Revelation's use in, 24 

Sabbath, 60-61 
Wrath. See God, wrath of; Judgment(s) 



Zacharias, 230 

Zealots, 246-47, 253 

Zeboiim, 226 

Zechariah, 66, 276, 29 1 , 376, 4 1 1 

Zerubbabel, 276 

Zeus, 112 

cult of, 10.5, 106 
Zilpah, 21 1,212 
Zion, Mount, 238, 358-59, 545 

Lamb on, 354-55 
Zionism, 612-15 

heresy of Christian, 619 

messianic Judaism and Christian, 612-21 

orthodox dispensationalism and Christian, 
615-16 

pop-dispensationalism and Christian, 
616-19 
Zodiac, 33n, 379 

four quarters of, 158, 389 

signs of, 1S8-60, 300-303 

twelve signs of, 301 



721